Syllabi: The Institution of Engineers, Sri Lanka
Syllabi: The Institution of Engineers, Sri Lanka
LANKA
SYLLABI
120/15,
WIJERAMA MAWATHA,
COLOMBO 7.
1
IESL ENGINEERING COURSE - SYLLABI
PART I
101 .. Mathematics
105 .. Thermodynamics
(Examinations for the (old) Part I syllabi will be conducted up to March, 2000)
• practicals for those who have had no practicals in the qualifying courses.
(Candidates for the Part I, are expected to offer all six subjects listed above.
2
101. Mathematics
Lectures = 80 hours
Algebra
Complex numbers; Argand diagram; algebra of complex numbers; De Moivre’s theorem; roots of
complex numbers Roots of algebraic equations; the remainder theorem.
08 hrs
Analysis
Functions: Limits, continuity; trigonometric, exponential, hyperbolic and logarithmic functions; inverse
functions; implicit functions.
Differentiation; Stationary points and curve sketching Mean value theorem; L’Hospital’s rule for limits
Leibnit’s theorem; partial differentiation and applications Infinite series and tests for convergence.
Taylor series in one and two variables.
17 hrs
Methods of integration; reduction formulae. Applications of integrals to areas, volumes, moments etc.
08 hrs
Ordinary differential equations; formulation Methods of solution of first order differential equations,
second order differential equations with constant coefficients Use of D-operators.
08 hrs
Numerical Methods
Solution of equations in one variable; successive substitution method rule of false position; Newton-
Raphson method; solution of simultaneous linear equations; Jacobi method; Gauss-Seidel method
04 hrs
Finite differences and interpolation
Numerical differentiation
06 hrs
Numerical integration; trapezoidal rule; Simpson’s rule
04 hrs
Numerical methods of, solution of ordinary differential equations
Euler’s method; Euler’s modified method; difference equations
06 hrs
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
Advanced Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists by G S Sharma, K L Ahuja and I J S Sarma, CBS
Publishers New Delhi.
3
Calculus
Advanced Calculus
Differential Equations
Numerical Analysis
First Course in Numerical Analysis by M A A Wolfe, van Nostrand Reinhold Company Ltd.
Lectures and Practical Classes – 90 hours additional Lecturers and Practical Classes 10 hrs.
4
Engineering Drawing Practice
(Lectures a, b, c, and practical class “a” are intended for those candidates, who do not posses a basic
knowledge in Engineering Drawing. Each set of lectures should be followed by a take home assignment
(THA) which need to be market & given to the students. Model answer for the take home assignments
should be distributed in the following session. The course will consist of lectures 12 + 3 (each of 2 hrs
duration) Practical Classes 4 + 1 (each of 4 hrs duration) Take home assignments 9 + 3. (THA) (Each
practical class is of 04 hours duration)
Lecture “a” - Instruments & Materials of drawing, Drawing standards, lines & lettering sizes of
drawings, Title blocks etd.
02 hrs
Lecture “b” - Simple geometrical constructions (Bisectors, perpendiculars, divided lines, areas,
circles, angles and other useful constructions) (THA)
02 hrs
Lecture “c” - Tangency construction, the properties with the associated constructions of the
common plane geometrical figures including conic sections & other loci – (THA)
02 hrs
Practical “a” - Class exercise base don lectures a, b and c. This all be exercise should be
marked by the lecturer and the common errors can be discussed at the class to
follow.
04 hrs
LECTURE 01
Revision Lecture for both categories of students. The principles of Engineering drawing including basic
geometrical constructions (Drawing Standards, Instruments and materials of drawing lines & lettering,
Graphic Geometry. The properties with the associated constructions of the common plane geometrical
figures including conic sections and other loci) (THA)
02 hrs
LECTURE 02 + 03
Recording and sketching two dimensional drawings. Orthographic drawing and sketching (First angle
and third angle projections) (THA)
04 hrs
PRACTICAL CLASS 01
Sectional views and conventions (Types of Sections, Assembly Sections, Conventional Practices, Auxiliary
Views and Sectionsl) (THA)
02 hrs
LECTURE 05 & 06
The preparation of working drawing and freehand sketching in Orthographic and Pictorial Projection of
Common Engineering Components and Simple Assemblies, Assembly Drawings Exploded, Exploded
Orthographic, scattered orthographic views. (THA)
04 hrs
PRACTICAL CLASS 02
LECTURE 07
5
The projection line on inclined and oblique planes, Projecting plane figures, Method of revolution,
coincidence and replacement of planes of projections. (THA)
02 hrs
LECTURE 08 & 09
LECTURE 10
Limits, bits and dimensional tolerances, geometrical tolerances, surface finish. (THA)
02 hrs
LECTURE 11
LECTURE 12
PRACTICAL CLASS 04
Experimental Data
Presentation of experimental data in graphs, monograms, etc.; curve fitting by least square method.
05 hrs
Presentation and use of statistical data: arrays: frequency tables: histograms: frequency polygons:
cumulative frequency polygons: mean: median: mode: range: standard deviation.
06 hrs
Use of probability: sample space: events: probability of events: addition law: conditional probability:
multiplication law: independence and dependence of events: Bays’ theorem: binomial, poisson and
normal distributions and applications.
14 hrs
Flow sheets: logic diagrams and networks for process representation: critical path analysis.
05 hrs
Computation
Digital computing: Basic model of a computer: the programme concept: Machine code: assembly
language and high level languages: compilers and interpreters.
6
Writing programmes in a high level language (Fortran, Basic or Pascal): simple flow charts and
algorithms: the subroutine concept: data structures and data types: control flow: basic input and output:
use of computer graphics.
07 hrs
Spread sheet programmes: entering data: data types: analysing data: presenting data in the form of
graphs: Introduction to Computer Aided Design.
06 hrs
Analog computing: block diagrams for solution of differential equations, analog computer components.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
3. Engineering Drawing
S. Bogolyuboy, A. Voinov
Mir Publishers – Moscow – 1986
1. Probability and Statistics for Engineers and Scientists by Ronald E. Walpole and
Raymond H. Myres, The Mcmillan Co. Ltd.,
2. Project Network Analysis and Critical Path by A.C. Simme and J.J. Britten, The
Machinery Publishing Co. Ltd.,
Lectures = 80 hours
Stresses (normal & shear) on an inclined plane in a 2D stress system – Formulae for normal and
shear stress on inclined plane – Mohr’s circle of stress – Invariants of a Mohr’s circle – Maximum and
Minimum principle stresses – pole of the Mohr’s circle – Applications of Mohr’s circle and
normal/shear stress formulae in analysing stress systems.
7
Stress/Strain relationships of a 2D system – Young’s modulus, shear modulus and Poisson’s ration –
Normal strain and shear strain – Formulae for normal and shear strain on an inclin4ed plane – Mohr’s
circle of strain – Stresses from strain gauge data.
08 hrs
Springs.
Close coiled and open coiled helical springs, Flat spiral springs, Leaf springs, Conical springs.
04 hrs
Bending Moments & shear Forces in statically determinate beams
Definition of bending moments and shear forces as internal forces in flexural members –
determination of bending moment and shear force at any given section of a beam – Relationship
between load, bending moment and shear force – Bending moment and shear force diagrams –
Principle of superposition. 06 hrs
Sectional properties of beam sections including built – up sections – Definition of neutral surface and
neutral axis – classification of bending stress as a direct (normal) stress at a sections – Tensile &
compressive stresses – Simple bending formula – Application of simple bending formula – Section
modulus – Distribution of bending stress at a section.
Definition of shear stress – Principle of complementary shear – Shear stress formula – Distribution of
shear stress at a section.
06 hrs
Deflection of beams
Shear stress due to torsion – Polar moment of inertia of a hollow/solid circular section –Torsion
formula – Tapering and composite shafts – Strain energy due to torsion stored in a shaft –
Transmission of power through shaft/pulley systems.
Concept of Elastic stability, Euler Buckling loads for struts with different end conditions, eccentrically
loaded struts, struts with initial curvature, stuts with lateral loads, struts with eccentric axial loads.
06 hrs
Interatomic Bonding: Ionic, covalent, metallic, ban der waals, and hydrogen bonds.
Directionality and polarity of bonds, Relationship between type of bond
and basic physical and mechanical properties of materials.
Crystal Structure
Crystallography Crystal systems, unit cell, density, packing factor, Miller indices.
8
Crystal Structure Analysis: Production of X-rays, X-ray diffraction, Bragg’s Law.
Phase Equilibria Single component systems, multi- component systems, phase rule,
interpretation of phase diagrams, equilibrium and non-equilibrium
microstructures.
06 hrs
12 hrs
Laboratory Experiments
3. Hardness Testing
4. Microstructure Examination
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
9
6. Introduction to Engineering Materials, V. B. John, Macmillan
7. Properties of Engineering Materials, R.A. Higgins, Hodder and Stoughton – London.
104. ELECTROTECHNIQUES
Lectures = 80 hrs
SI System of Units
02 Hours
Electric charge : description of the Electric field of charges at rest;
Colombo’s law, Gauss’s law.
Permittivity, Field Energy, dielectrics, insulation.
Determination of capacitance.
06 hrs
Effects of Electric and Magnetic Fields on charged particles
Election beam deflection.
04 hrs
Elements of plane radiation field in free space
03 hrs
Conduction current as the movement of charge Electric and Magnetic fields of charges in motion.
Ampere’s law, left hand rule, Biot-Savart law.
04 hrs
10
Conductivity, conduction loss, continuity resistance, ohm’s law, Kirchoff’s laws Ideal energy dissipating
and energy storage parameters. Energy sources and loads; constant current and constant voltage
sources.
03 hrs
Induced emfs – Faraday’s and Lenz’s laws Electromagnetic systems.
02 hrs
Magnetic field of simple linear current configurations.
Permeability, field energy, inductance. Simple magnetic circuits,
05 hrs
Transient responses of ideal network elements to step, ramp and sine stimuli. Mechanical and thermal
analogues.
04 hrs
Cyclic repetitions; qualitative analysis of periodic waveforms as harmonic sums.
03 hrs
A.C. waveforms – average, rms values. Steady state single phase a.c. networks.
Basic principles of balanced three-phase systems. Power factor improvement; load addition.
06 hrs.
Operation principles of simple instruments used for measuring voltage, current and power.
04 hrs
The ideal transformer
Deviations from the ideal; Analysis of simple single phase transformers under steady loads.
04 hrs
The ideal rotating machine
Conditions for force and torque production.
04 hrs
The laboratory classes in ELECTROTECHNIQUES should consist of five experiments taken from the
following:-
1. Insulation and Continuity Testing, and Measurement of earth resistance, earth loop impedance.
2. Study of simple ac circuits
(including series and parallel circuits comprising R,L and C elements)
3. A study of non-linear devices
(to include non-linear resistances such as tungsten filament lamps, diodes etc)
4. Measurement of power and energy
(use of the wattmeter and /or energy meter)
5. Current ratings of fuses and MCBs.
11
6. Use of bridges for measurement
(experiment to consist of the use of one bridge circuit, such as Kelvin’ Double bridge, Hay’s
bridge, etc.)
7. Calibration of a meter
(Calibration of a moving coil meter, moving iron meter or an energy meter)
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
105. THERMODYNAMICS
Lectures = 80 hours
Fundamental concepts
Units and dimensions. Definition of thermodynamic terms such as properties, process, path cycle
process, state etc. Boundarles of a system and the interaction between the system and its surroundings.
04 hours
First Law of thermodynamics
Definition of work; calculation of work involved in reversible processes. Heat and work as interactions.
Application of First Law of thermodynamic systems. Internal Energy and Enthalpy. Energy equation
applied to non – flow processes. Kinetic Energy and Potential Energy. Energy equation applied to flow
process. Introduction to simple flow and non – flow process.
12 hrs
Second Law of thermodynamics
Second Law and its corollaries. Reversible and irreversible processes. The efficiency of reversible heat
engines. Thermodynamic scale of temperature. Entropy as a property and its relation with other
properties. The Clausius Inequality. Isentropic efficiency.
10 hrs
12
Properties of ideal gases and vapours
Three phases of matter; solid, liquid and vapour. Equilibrium between phases, phase changes, triple and
critical points. Tabular and graphical properties of real gases.
10 hrs
Flow and non – flow processes
Flow and non – flow processes undergone by ideal gases and vapours. Equation of state, specific gas
constant. Universal gas constant. Relations of specific heats. Relations between entropy changes and
changes in other thermodynamic properties.
10 hrs
Vapour power cycles
Carnot cycle for steam. Rankine cycle with and without superheat. Representation of cycles on P V, T –
S and H – S diagrams. Thermal efficiency, work ratio and power output. Effect of reheating of steam
and regenerative feed heating. Back pressure and pass out turbine plants.
14 hrs
Gas power cycles
Carnot cycle for ideal gas. Otto cycle and Diesel cycle. Thremal efficiency and power output.
Correlation with actual four stroke cycle. Cycle efficiency and mean effective pressure as criteria of
performance. Practical working of reciprocating internal combustion engines.
12 hrs
Refrigeration
08 hrs.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
i. Compulsory practicals
1. Redwood viscometer
2. Flash point
3. Thomson’s calorimeter
4. Boy’s Calorimeter
It is recommended to perform at least five (05) practicals. IESL may select practicals from the optional
list.
RECOMMENDED TEXTS
13
3. Thermal Environmental Engineering
- by James L Threlkeld
FLUID MECHANICS
Differences between liquids and gasses, ideal and real fluids; Density – Specific Weight – Specific Volume
– Pressure Exerted by a fluid – Bulk Modulus – Viscosity – Surface Tension – Units of Measurement.
02 hrs.
Fluids at Rest
Thrusts on vertical and inclined plane immersed surfaces and on curved immersed surfacws – Thrusts on
immersed bodies – Centre of Pressure – Lock Gates – Thrusts on Dams.
04 hrs.
Fluids in Equilibrium
Measurement of Pressure – Different types of Manometers and Pressure Gauges – Buoyancy – Centre of
Buoyancy – Stability of Submerged and Floating Bodies – Meta Centre Experimental and Analytical
determination of Metacentric Height – Floating Bodies containing water – Anchored Floating Bodies –
Oscillation of Floating Bodies – Pitching and Rolling – Equilibrium of Moving Fluids.
06 hrs
Dynamics of Fluids
The Continuity Equation – The Euler Equation – The Navier-Stokes Equation – The Velocity Potential
Function – the Stream function – Circulation – Vorticity – The Source – The Sink, The Doublet – Flow
Nets – Separation – Stagnation Point – Basic Flow Patterns: Rectilinear Flow. Flow from a Line Source,
14
Flow to a Line Sink – Combination of Basic Flow Patterns: Uniform Rectilinear Flow and Line Source;
Source and Sink of numerically equal strength, Source and Sink of numerically equal strength combined
with Uniform Rectilinear Flow.
12 hrs
Differences between Uniform and Non-Uniform Flow, Steady and unsteady Flow – Stream Line – Stream
Tube – Pressure Head, Velocity Head and Total head – Bernoulli’s Equation – Continuity Equation in one,
two and three dimensions – Reynold’s Number – Transition from Laminar to Turbulent Flow in pipes –
Critical Velocity and its determination – Frictional Losses in pipes (Darcy Formula) – Minor Losses in pipes
– Simple pipeline problems with reservoir, pipeline, pump combinations with pipes in series and in
parallel – Pitot Tube Venturimeter – Orifice (Including large orifices drawned orifices) – Times of
emptying rectangular and hemispherical tanks through an orifice – Sharp Crested Weirs, Francis
Formula, Bazin’s Formula, velocity of Approach, Time of emptying a reservoir with a sharp crested
rectangular weir – Notches – Time of emptying a tank through a pipe – Flow between two tanks –
Momentum Equation – Force caused by the impact of a jet – Force at a Nozzle and the reaction of a jet –
Force on a solid body in a flowing Fluid – Variation of Energy across Stream Lines – Free and Forced
Vortices.
16 hrs
MECHANICS
Kinematics
Kinematics of a particle and a rigid body in plane motion. Position. Velocity and acceleration of a points
on a rigid body in plane motion. Relative motion, angular velocity, angular acceleration and coriolis law.
Velocity diagrams and acceleration diagrams of mechanisms.
8 hrs
Dynamics
Dynamics of a particle and a rigid body in plane motion. Newton’s laws of motion. D’Alembert’s
principle. Work performed on a mechanical system. Power and efficiency. Kinetic energy, potential
energy, work-energy relations for a rigid body. Law of conservation of energy.
The impulse – momentum relation for a particle and a system of particles. The moment of momentum
of a system. Torque and work done by a torque.
06 hrs
Turning Moment Diagram and Flywheel
Engine torque, load torque and accelerating torque in a simple drive. Cyclic fluctuation of speed. Work
done and work absorbed per cycle. Mean speed, coefficient fluctuation of speed and energy. Design of
flywheel.
06 hrs
Balancing of Rotors
Static and dynamic balancing of rigid rotors. Resolution method and force and couple polygon method.
06 hrs
Friction
Laws of friction between unlubricated surfaces. Friction formulae for square and V-threads. Plate
clutches, cone clutches and centrifugal clutches under uniform pressure and uniform wear conditions.
06 hrs
Vibrations
Free vibration of one degree of freedom systems without damping and systems with viscous damping.
Analytical solutions and phase-plane diagrams.
15
Forced vibration of viscous damped one degree of freedom systems.
08 hrs
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Section I
1. Experimental determination of the Hydrostatic Thrust on Immersed surfaces using the
Centre of Pressure apparatus.
03 hrs
2. Measurement of Frictional Loss in a pipe for Reynold’s Numbers in the Laminar and
Turbulent ranges
03 hrs
Section II
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
3. Fluid Mechanics, J.F Douglas, J.M. Gasiorek and J.A. Swaffield, ELBS/Pitman
5. Solution of Problems in Fluid Mechanics parts I & II, J.F. Douglas, Pitman
7. Applied Mechanics
J Hannah & M J Miller (Longmans)
16
11. Theory of Machines
R S Khurmi & Gupta
17
CURRICULA FOR THE IESL COURSES
SYLLABI
PART II,
List of Subjects
Part II
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
201. Mathematics 80
202. Structural Analysis 80 6
203. Surveying 80 42
204. Hydraulics 80 6
205. Engineering Geology and Soil Mechanics 80 18
206. Structural Design – Reinforced Concrete 80 18
18
Mechanical Engineering Stream
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
201. Mathematics 80
212. Applied Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics 80 24
213. Mechanics of Machines 80 12
214. Strength of Materials 80 18
215. Production Technology 80 18
216. Materials Engineering 80 18
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
201. Mathematics 80
207. Electromagnetic Fields and Networks 80
208. Electrical Machines I 80 24
209. Power Systems I 80 18
210. Electronics 80 24
212. Applied Thermodynamics & Fluid Mechanics 80 24
19
Electronics, Communications & Computer Engineering Stream
6 Subjects, all compulsory
201. Mathematics
207. Electromagnetic Fields and Networks
208. Electrical Machines I
209. Power Systems I
210. Electronics
211. Communications
PART TWO
List of Subjects
201 Mathematics
202 Structural Analysis
203 Surveying
204 Hydraulics
205 Engineering Geology and Soil Mechanics
206 Structural Design: Reinforced Concrete
207 Electromagnetic Fields and Networks
208 Electrical Machines I
209 Power Systems I
210 Electronics
211 Communications
212 Applied Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics
213 Mechanics of Machines
214 Strength of Materials
215 Production Technology
216 Materials Engineering
201 MATHEMATICS
Lectures = 80 Hours
20
10 hrs
Calculus: Brief introduction to improper integral, differentiation of integral. Function of two or three
variables, multiple integral, Taylor series applications. Constrained maxima and minima, Lagrange
multipliers
10 hrs
Laplace transform of elementary functions and some basic theorems on Laplace transform.
Application of Laplace Transform to solution of differential equation and systems, transfer function,
convolution theorem, concepts of stability and controllability.
08 hrs
Ordinary linear differential equations with variable coefficients, solution in series, special
function (eg. Bessel, Legendre) – Singular points, Existence and uniqueness of the solution (elementary
discussions without proof).
15 hrs
Vector Calculus : Vector differentiation and differential operators, space curves and line integral,
surfaces and surface integral. Diverqence theorem, Stokes’ theorem, Green’s theorem in plane. Some
basic applications.
20 hrs
Linear Algebra: Brief treatment of vectors in higher dimension (linearly independent vectors,
orthogonal and normal vectors) – Schemes for solution of simultaneous linear equations (Gauss
elimination scheme for tridiagonal matrices, triangular decomposition). Partitioned matrices. Eigen
value problem (Algebraic determination of eigen values, properties of eigen values, eigen values of
symmetric matrix, similar matrices, quadratic form and their reduction). Some basic applications to
boundary value problems.
08 hrs
Fourier Series Approximation Fourier coefficients, Dirichlet’s condition, odd and even function, half
range series, Trigonometric approximation to discrete data.
07 hrs
Basic Probability and Statistics: Classificatin of data, continuous and discrete variate.
Determination of mode, median, mean, variance and standard deviation. Elementary probability,
addition and multiplication of probabilities, binomial, poisson and normal distribution. Simple application.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Advanced mathematics for Engineers and Scientists by G S Sharma, K L Ahuja and IJS Sarma,
CBS Publishers New Delhi. Vol. I & II (Multiple Copies)
2. Mathematics for Engineers and Scientist by Alan Jeffery
3. Schaum’s Outline Series books on
Matrices
Linear Algebra
Vector Analysuis
Calculus
Advanced Calculus
Differential Equations
Numerical Analysis
Lecture = 80 hours
21
Force (external, internal), displacement, support types, equations of static equilibrium, statical
determinacy.
04 hrs
Energy Theorems
12 hrs
Strain energy stored in elements due to axial, bending, torsional & shear effects, Castigliano’s theorems,
principle of virtual work, Engressor’s theorem, lack of fit and temperature effects in structures, analysis
of statically determinate and indeterminate structures using energy theorems.
Moment Distribution
12 hrs
Fixed end moments, Stiffness of elements, distribution factors and carry-over factors in elements,
moment distribution procedures, symmetry and anti-symmetry, sway analysis, correction factors,
applications in beams, single and multi-storey frames.
Arches 08 hrs
Significance of arch profile, theoretical and actual arch profiles, three pinned, two pinned and tied
arches, bending moment, axial thrust and radial shear in arches, influence lines, effects of temperature
changes.
Suspension Bridges
06 hrs
Unstiffened cable bridges, bridges with three-pin stiffening girder.
Stress Analysis
08 hours
22
Stress in Cartesian and polar co-ordinates, stress functions (Airy stress function), applications of stress
functions, experimental stress analysis, strain gauges, strain rosettes.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
06 hours
1. Tensile test
2. Elasticity of timber
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
Analysis of Structures (Vol. I), VN Vazirani, MM Ratwani, Khana Publishers, New Delhi
Analysis of Structures (Vol. II),VN Vazirani, MM Ratwani, Khanna Pubishers, New Delhi
202 SURVEYING
Lectures = 80 Hours
23
Basic principles of survey methods. Overview of Chain Surveying, Compass Traversing and Plane Table
Surveying.
Levelling
10 hrs
Basic optical and mechanical principles of Dumpy and Tilting levels. Temporary and permanent
adjustments of dumpy and tilting levels. Principles and practices in leveling. Booking systems and
calculation of reduced levels. Errors in leveling. Sensitivity of bubble tube. Effect of Earth’s curvature
and atmospheric refraction. Standards of accuracy. Trigonometric Leveling, Reciprocal Leveling and
Precise Leveling.
Optional and mechanical properties of vernier theodolites and modern precise theodolites. Operating
and adjusting the theodolite. Measurement of horizontal and vertical angles. Booking systems and
computations. Errors due to malconstruction and their effects. Errors due to non-adjustment of
permanent errors. Theodolite traversing and traverse computations. Plotting of a traverse.
Adjustments for closing errors in traverse. Sources of error in theodolite traversing.
Tacheometry
06 hours
Instruments used. Stadia tacheometry. Anallactic lens. Subtense tacheometry. Errors in tacheometry.
Accuracy of measurements.
Air Surveys
10 hours
Aerial photography. Characteristics of a photograph. Ground control points. Parallax. Stereoscopy.
Ground height form parallax readings. Parallax formula. Mosaics and photomaps. Distortion of images
on aerial photographs. Introduction to the use of stereoplotters.
12 hours
Theory of Errors
12 hrs
Errors in Surveying and their sources. Theory of Probability. Theory of Least Squares. Application of
Theory of Probability and Theory of Least Squares to Surveying. Solution of binomial equations.
Weighting of errors.
Curve Ranging
12 hrs
Horizontal circular curves and their application in Highway and Railway construction. Simple, compound
and reverse curve. Setting-out of horizontal circular curves. Transition curves; cubic, spiral and cubic
spiral curves. Principles of transition. Design and setting out of transition curves. Vertical curves; sag
24
and summit curves. Approximations used in vertical curve computations. Design factors and radius of
the curve.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
42 hours
203 HYDRAULICS
Lectures = 80 HOURS
Boundary Layers
08 hrs
Viscosity of Fluids – Definition of boundary Layer – Displacement Thickness & Momentum Thickness –
Distribution of Shear Stress and Velocity and Computation of Drag Force in Laminar and Turbulent
Boundary Layers – Drag Coefficient – Dynamic Pressure – Form Drag and Skin Friction Drag – Wakes –
Streamlining of bodies - Lift and Drag of Aerofoils.
25
Pipe Systems and Networks
08 hrs
Equations for Frictional Loss in Pipes – Darcy Formula – Manning’s Formula – Hazen William’s Formula –
Relationship between the Coefficients of different formulae – variation of Friction Factor with Reynold’s
Number and Relative Roughness (Mody Diagram) – Pipe Networks - Analysis of Pipe Networks using
Iterative Methods (Hardy Cross Method).
Hydraulic Machinery
16 hours
General Introduction – Types of Pumps and Turbines – Total Head of Pumps and Turbines
Reciprocating pumps – Components and Mechanism – SHM of Piston – Single and Double acting Pumps
– Slip – Inertia Pressure – Friction in Suction and Delivery Pipes – Air Vessels – Work saved by Air
Vessels – Indicator Diagram – Limiting Pressures in Suction and Delivery Pipes – Cavitation – Practical
Applications and Limitations of Reciprocating Pumps.
Certifugal Pumps : General Equation for Head Generated – Velocity Triangles – Efficiencies – Specific
Speed – Performance at Constant and Variable Speed – Guide Vanes – Volute Casing – Priming of
Centrifugal Pumps – Self Priming Pumps – Deep Well Pumps – Installation of Centrifugal Pumps.
Impulse and Reaction Turbines : General Equation for Power Generated – Velocity Triangles – Pelton
Turbine – Velocity ratio and speed regulation in Pelton Turbines – Francis Turbines – Specific Speed –
Efficiencies – Characteristic Curves – Guide Vanes – Draft Tubes – Selection of Turbines – Introduction to
Hydro Power installations in Sri Lanka.
Water Quality
24 hours
Characteristics of Water Quality : Introduction to Water Quality Concepts – The need for Water Quality
Studies and Water Quality Standards – Physical, Chemical and biological Characteristics of Water -–Water
related Diseases.
Treatment of Water Supplies : Introduction to Water Treatment Processes – Screening – aeration – Plain
Sedimentation – Coagulation – Flocculation & Sedimentation – Filtration – Disinfection.
Waste Water Treatment : Introduction to Waste Water Treatment Process – Primary, Secondary, and
Tertiary Treatment Methods.
Water and Waste Water Systems : Water Supply Systems – Collection, Treatment, Transmission and
Distribution Works – Sources of Water Supply- Population Growth – Water Demand and Variations in
26
Flow – problems dealing with Reservoir Capacities and Pumping Rates using Mass Diagrams – Application
of Pump and System Characteristic Curves to Water Supply Problems.
Waste Water Systems – Collection, treatment and Outflow of Disposal Works of Waster Water Collection
Systems – Estimation of the Quantities Pipe Diameters using Nomographs and the application of Partial
Flow Diagrams – Design Periods for Water Supply and Waste Water Structures and the factors affecting
them.
Water Pollution and its Control : Types and Sources of Pollution – Outline of the Overall effects of Water
Pollution and Control Measures.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Fluid Mechanics for Civil Engineers, N.B. Webber, E&F.N. Spon Ltd.
2. A Textbook of Fluid Mechanics, J.R.D. Francis, Edward Arnold (Publishers) Ltd.
3. Analysis of Surge, John Pickford, Macmillan
4. Dimensional Analysis and Hydraulic Model Testing, H M Ragunath, Asia Publishing House, London.
5. Solution of Problems in Fluid Mechanics, Parts 1 & 2, J F Douglas, Pitman
6. Water and Waste Water Engineering, G M Fair, J C Geyer, and D A Okum, John Wiley & Sons
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Engineering Geology
02 hrs
Earth’s place in the space. History of the earth
02 hrs
06 hrs
27
Process of weathering, erosion transportation and deposition. Nature distribution and engineering
characteristics of sediments deposited in different environments, deltaic, desert, flurial, glacial,
periglacial, residual soils.
06 hrs
Deformational features of the earths crust and deformational features of rocks. (foliation, folds, faults,
lineations and joints). Intraformational shears. Nature and origin in relation to stress fields.
Formation and classification of sediments and sedimentary rocks
04 hrs
06 hours
Principles of hydrogeology. Rock and soil permeability. Groundwater regimes, springs, aquifers and
aquicludes. The engineering significance of groundwater conditions. Influence of rocks and sediments
on groundwater. Groundwater pollution.
04
hours
Construction materials. Suitability of rock types and soils etc. for construction industry. Locating rock
quarries and borrow pits.
SOIL MECHANICS
Atterberg Limits
06 hours
2. Classification of Soils
03 hours
Classification of Soils for engineering purposes, purpose of Classification, different systems,
28
Unified Classification System
3. Compaction of Soils
04 hours
Proctor compaction test, AASHO test, air voids ratio, Compaction in the field, Compaction
Control, Field testing of density, Principles of soil stabilization.
4. Permeability of Soils
08 hours
Darcy’s law, Hydraulic gradient, Coefficient of permeability, Laboratory and field measurement
of permeability, Steady seepage.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Map 1 - Drawing strike lines for foliations and calculation of true dip.
Map 2 - Drawing geological cross sections perpendicular and parallel to the strike direction
of the foliation.
Map 4 - Use of underground geology (3 bore holes) to prepare a surface geological map
Map 9 - do
Map 10 - do
29
206. STRUCTURAL DESIGN: REINFORCED CONCRETE
Lectures = 80 hours
Introduction to Design
06 hours
Design - difference between analysis and design; steps involved in structural design
(layout, load evaluation, idealisation, analysis, section design); partial safety
factors; limit state deign; ultimate and serviceability states; code of practice, i.e.
BS 8110.
Materials - characteristic and design strengths; idealised stress-strain curves for concrete
and steel; partial safety factors for materials.
Loads - characteristic and design loads; types of loads (dead, imposed, wind); partial
safety factors for loads.
30
Fundamentals of reinforced concrete behaviour – concrete stress blocks; stress in steel and conditions
for yielding; under-reinforced and over-reinforced sections; analysis of a section by strain compatibility.
Design of rectangular beams – choice of section; minimum depth for under-reinforced section;
calculation of reinforcement for singly reinforced and doubly reinforced sections using design formulae;
use of design charts; minimum and maximum percentages of reinforcement; effective span slenderness
limits.
Design of flanged beams – locations of flanged beam action; effective flange width; design of flanged
beams using design formulae
Shear resistance of concrete – uncracked concrete, aggregate interlock and dowel action; dependence of
shear resistance on concrete grade, percentage of steel and depth of section; enhanced shear resistance
near supports.
Design of shear reinforcement – truss analogy; vertical link reinforcement; designed and nominal
reinforcement; detailing rules; introduction to bent-up bars.
Crack width – use of maximum spacing rules; also minimum spacing rules to avoid reinforcement
congestion.
Cover – based on exposure conditions and grade; adaptation for Sri Lanka conditions; based on fire
resistance requirements
Achorage bond stress – dependence on stress state, concrete grade and bar type; hooks and bends;
rules for lapping of bars; rules for curtailing bars; difference between theoretical and practical cut-off
points; simplified curtailing rules for beams and slabs.
Slabs
08 hours
General – importance of deflection criterion for slabs; trial span/depth rations; bar spacing rules.
One way slabs – design as shallow beams; conditions for and method of simplified coefficients for
analysis of a 1-way slab system.
Two way slabs – moment coefficients for simply supported and restrained slabs; different support
conditions; middle strips, edge strips and torsion in restrained slabs; shear coefficients.
Columns
12 hours
Classification and Loading – short vs. slender; braced vs. unbraced; effective height; determination of
moments and forces in columns.
Short columns – design equations for column with predominantly axial load; design charts for columns
with axial load and moment; biaxial bending; detailing rules for longitudinal and link reinforcement.
31
Slender Columns - moments due to deflection (in braced and unbraced columns); moments at different
points (i.e. ends and mid-heights) of columns; additional moments due to slenderness; use of design
charts, including reduction of additional moments
Foundations
06 hours
Types of foundations – e.g. pad, strip, combined, raft, pile
Pad footings – choice of dimensions for carrying axial load and moments; use of service loads for bearing
capacity check; ultimate state design for reinforced concrete; design for bending as inverted cantilever
slab; detailing and anchorage; vertical line shear; punching shear; choice of footing depth based on
shear considerations.
Staircases
06 hours
Choice of dimensions (going, rise, tread, waist); types of staircases (transverse and longitudinal
spanning); design as inclined 1-way slab; load evaluation; detailing.
Frame analysis for horizontal loads – braced and unbraced frames; load combinations; analysis using
hinges at beam and column midpoints.
Redistribution of moments – M-0 curves and plasticity; plastic hinge formation with increasing load;
redistribution procedure; constraints on redistribution; rationale for redistribution.
Design for stability – design philosophy for non-catastrophic failure; physical barriers; robust layout;
notional horizontal load; key elements; bridging elements; types of ties (international, peripheral,
column/wall, vertical); tie forces; arrangement of ties; anchorage of ties.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
18 hours
32
207 ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS AND NETWORKS
1. Electromagnetic Fields
33
Concepts of wave impedance, Poynting theorem, polarisation, retarded functions.
Penetration of electromagnetic waves into conductors, skin effect
Guided electromagnetic waves (TEM, TE and TM waves)
2. Networks
06 hours
2.1 Techniques of formulation and solution of network equations graph theory, nodal and
Mesh formulation Matrix representation and manipulation solution of network equations,
solution of Transient equations.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. CTA Johnk, Engineering Electromagnetic fields and waves, John Wiley & Sons, 1975.
2. Javid & Brown, Field Analysis and Electromagnetics, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.
3. G Doetsch, Guide to the Applications of the Laplace and z-Transforms, New York: Van
NostrandReinhold Company, 1971.
34
5. FM Reza & S Seely, Modern Network Analysis, McGraw-Hill Book Company Inc.
Lectures = 80 hours
Transformers
10 hours
AC Machines
30 hours
35
Special characteristics of single phase induction motors, and its influence on the starting methods.
Two phase servo motor; linear induction motor concepts.
DC Machines
24 hours
Separately excited dc machine. Armature windings; effect of armature reaction and communication
process.
Steady state equivalent circuits and characteristics of dc shunt, series and compound machines.
Starting and speed control of different types of dc motors.
General
10 hours
Machine ratings: losses, cooling, thermal conduction and convention; temperature rise; thermal cycles,
thermal rating; transient heating.
Reluctance motors and their applications
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
(The experiments carried out should include each of DC machines, transformers and induction machines)
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
36
209 POWER SYSTEMS I
Lectures = 80 hours
Introduction
12 hours
Conventional and alternative sources of energy; Environmental and ecological consideration; power
needs of the world; Load forecasting; Methods of generation of electricity; Large scale generation of
electrical power; Thermal, nuclear, hydro, pumped storage, OTEC, solar, wind, wave, their advantages
and short comings; power generation in Sri Lanka; Economics of Power generation.
Power Transmission
12 hours
Short, medium and long line calculations; ferranti effect; shunt and series compensation; generalised
circuits constants; equivalent T and II circuits; Receiving-end sending-end and universal circle diagrams;
power limits.
Faults
08 hours
Review of symmetrical components and per-unit system; symmetrical three phase faults; unsymmetrical
faults; fault levels.
Switchgear
10 hours
37
Types of switchgear and fuses; fault clearing and interruption of currents; arc formation; mehtod of
quenching; restriking and recovery voltage transients; circuit breaker; various capacities and principle of
operation; Indoor and outdoor types; Oil circuit breakers, air circuit breakers, miniature circuit breakers,
air blast and sulphur hexafluoride circuit breakers.
Protection
12 hours
Current and potential transformers; Overcurrent relays; Inverse definite minimum time (IDMT),
directional, differential protectionl; Pilot wire protection; distance relays; Amplitude and phase angle
comparators; Characteristics in the resistance-reactance plane Protection of generators, transformers,
busbars and transmission lines.
Power Distribution
14 hours
Feeders and distributors; Radial and ring types; Substation layout; Tariffs and tariff structure in Sri
Lanka; Economic of utilisation, power factor improvement; Load curves, load factor, diversity factor,
coincidence factor, utilisation factor, plant factor etc.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Allan J Wood, Bruce F Wollenberg, Power Generation Operation and Control, John Wiley & Sons,
New York, USA, 1994
2. Weedy B M Electric Power Systems, John Wiley & Sons, New York, USA, 1983
3. Elgerd O, Electric Energy Systems Theory, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York.
4. William D Stevenson, Jr. Elements of Power System Analysis, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New
York, 1982
38
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Familiarization of the definitions. Investigation of load and diversity factors for different loads types with
specified diversifications.
Study of the theoretical concepts of earthing and determination of earth resistance of an electrode at
different depths of insertion with the position of potential electrode varied; Measurement of the
resistively of earth.
Study of the variation of voltages of uniformly loaded radially and ring connected distribution lines using
models and determination of voltage regulation.
Study of the function of arc suppression coil with an earth fault in one of the lines in a three phase
system; Determination of the value of inductance which minimises the earth fault current.
Familiarisation of methods of granding high voltage suspension insulator strings; Determination of the
voltage distribution along the string and string efficiency with different insulator moderls.
Determination of ABCD parameters and voltage regulation of a balanced three phase transmission line
modelled with a single phase equivalent circuit.
Development of sending-end and receiving-end circle diagrams associated with a transmission line using
a laboratory model.
39
Study of overcurrent relays
Familiarisation of the operation of the inverse over current relay; Study of pick up value, time adjustment
with different plug settings and time multiplier settings.
210 ELECTRONICS
Lectures = 80 hours
02 hrs
Semiconductor theory
Diodes
08 hrs
Behaviour of pn junction, diode characteristic curve and current equation, equivalent circuits, zener and
Schottky diodes; diode circuits: rectification, demodulation, limiting, clamping and regulation.
Operational amplifier
06 hrs
Ideal characteristics, typical specifications, basic amplifier circuits, summer amplifier, integrator,
differentiator and comparator circuits.
Feedback
08 hrs
Principle of closed-loop systems, simple analysis of series-fed voltage feedback in amplifiers, effects of
negative feedback on gain, bandwidth, distortion, stability, input and output impedances, simple
transistor and operational amplifier circuits using negative feedback, effects of positive feedback, simple
oscillator circuits.
Combinational logic
40
12 hrs
Digital signals, basic gates, truth tables, construction of basic gates using resistors, diodes and
transistors, common logic families( (TTL, CMOS, ECL), design limitation imposed by noise margins,
fanout, Boolean algebra, minimization of expressions using AND-OR gates and NAND gates, multiplexes,
decoders, comparators, adders; programmable logic devices.
Sequential Logic
12 hrs
Sequential model, latches, RS, JK D and T flip-flops, parallel registers serial registers, asynchronous and
synchronous counters, design of simple finite state machines: state diagrams and tables, transition
tables, implementation using flip-flops and ROMs.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Bogart, F.G., Electronic Devices and Circuits, Bell & Howell Company, 1986
2. Millmanm, J. & Grabel, A., Microelectronics, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1987,
3. Tocci, R.J., Digital Systems, Principles and Applications, Prentice hall, 1991.
1. Horowitz, P, & Hill, W., The Art of Electronics, Cambridge University Press, 1989.
2. King R., Integrated Electronic Communications: Modulation and Transmission, Bell & Hoell, 1990.
41
211. COMMUNICATIONS
Lectures - 80 hours
Signal Analysis
03 hrs
Power signals: periodic waveforms, trigonometric and exponential Fourier series, line spectra, Parseval’s
power theorem
06 hrs
Energy signals: Fourier transform and transform theorems, continuous spectrum, energy spectral
density, Rayleigh’s energy theorem
03 hrs
Autocorrelation function, spectral desity functions
04 hrs
System Analysis
Linear systems: impulse response, convolutional integral, transfer function, frequency response,
frequency response plots
03 hrs
Signal transmission: distrotionless transmission, group & phase delay, equalization, nonlinear distortions
04 hrs
Filters: Butterworth, Chebyshew, and Bessel filters
09 hrs
Analog Communications
Amplitude modulation: DSB, DSB-SC, SSB and VSB modulations, envelope detection, coherent detection,
modulators and demodulators
Phase & Frequency Modulation: Phase modulation, frequency
Modulation, PM & FM with tones, wideband & narrowband FM, banwidth occupancy, limiter-discriminator
detection, PLL detection, modulators & demodulators, interference effect, deemphasis & preemphasis,
companding
02 hrs
Superheterodyne receiver, frequency multiplexing
03 hrs
Pulse Modulation
Sampling theory,: Ideal sampling, aliasing, Nyquist sampling theorem, practical sampling, signal
reconstruction techniques
03 hrs
Pulse modulation: PAM, PWM, PPM, modulators & demodulators, cross talk & guard bands, time division
multiplexing
04 hrs
Pulse-code modulation: PCM modulation and demodulation, quantization error, QSNR expression,
companding, time division multiplexing
03 hrs
Delta modulation: Delta modulator, slope overloading, idling & granular noise, SNR expression, adaptive
delta modulation
42
03 hrs
Digital Transmission Techniques
Baseband data transmission: line coding, bandwidth occupancy, Nyquist signalling rate, intersmbol
interference, equalization
06 hrs
Digital carrier modulation: ASK, PSK, DPSK, FSK, modulations, coherent & noncoherent detection, error
rate expressions
Introduction to information theory, measure of information, entropy source coding, mutual information,
channel capacity
09 hrs
Line Communication
Transmission lines: transmission line equations, reflection coefficient, VSWR, high frequency lines,
impedance matching, Smith chart applications.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
1. filters
2. Amplitude modulation
3. Frequency modulation
4. Pulse modulation
5. Pulse-code modulation (delta modulation can also be included)
6. Digital carrier modulation
7. Transmission Line characteristics
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
43
212. APPLIED THERMODYNAMICS AND FLUID MECHANICS
Lectures = 80 Hours
A. APPLIED THERMODYNAMICS
Work transfer in reversible single stage reciprocating compressors; volumetric efficiency and isothermal
efficiency: multi – stage working with intercooling. Rotary positive displacement compressors.
Steady one dimensional flow of gases and vapours through nozzles and diffuses; critical pressure ration;
effect of friction. Adiabatic flow through long pipes. Concept of stagnation properties at a point in a
fluid stream.
Mean diameter treatment of kinematics and momentum transfer. Introduction to radial and axial flow
machines. Impulse and 50% reaction blading in axial flow turbines; main sources of internal losses;
overall, stage and polytropic efficiencies and reheat factor.
Combustion 08 hrs
Combustion of hydrocarbon fuels; volumetric and gravimetric analysis; stoichiometry. Internal Energy of
reactions, enthalpy of reactions and of formation. First Law applied to chemical reactions.
B. FLUID MECHANICS
Definition of irrotational and rotational flow. Circulation, Vorticity. Stream function and velocity potential
function for basic combined flow patters (uniform flow, source – sink, doublet, point vortex). Flow
around circular cylinder with circulation. Free and forced vortes.
Newton’s Law, Analysis of flow in bounded systems (flow between parallel plates and annuli).
Introduction to hydrodynamic lubrication. Characteristics of non – Newtonian fluids.
44
Classification of pumps and turbines. Centrifugal pump head and energy relation, head capacity
characteristics. Impulse and reaction turbines. Application of dynamic similarity to turbo machines.
Introduction to bluff and streamlined bodies. Flow around streamlined bodies. Flow around streamlined
bodies and their lift and drag characteristion. Drag characteristics of circular cylinder and sphere.
Section I
i. Compulsory practicals
2. Redwood viscometer
3. Marcet’s boiler
4. Calibration of indicator spring
5. Flash point apparatus
6. Thomson’s calorimeter
7. Boy’s calorimeter
8. Calibration of pressure gauge
Section II
Three experiments from Section I and II experiments from section II must be completed.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
45
RECOMMENDED READING
46
213. MECHANICS OF MACHINES
Lectures = 80 hours
Methods of power transmission available, descriptive treatment and elementary analysis of positive,
friction, electro – mechanical and fluid drives.
Power transmission via belts; friction formulae for flat and V-belts, centrifugal tension, initial tension,
creep and slip. Band brakes and dynamometers.
Governors 10 hrs
Centrifugal and insertia governors. Different types of governors. Controlling force and stability of
governors. Sensitivity and frequency of oscillation of governors.
Cams 08 hrs
Different types of cams and cam followers. Methods of finding pitch curves and profiles for radial cams
with various types of follower. Desirable follower motions and characteristic curves.
Out of balance in a slider crank mechanism, partial balancing of single cylinder engines. Primary and
secondary balancing of in – line engines, V – engines, radial engines and reciprocating compressors.
Direct and reverse crank technique.
Vibration 12 hrs
Free vibration of two D.O.F undamped and damped systems, governing equations, natural frequencies
and natural modes. Mechanical systems, Structural systems and torsional systems. Forced vibration of
D.O.F. undamped and viscous damped systems.
Motion in 3 – D 16 hrs
Equation of motion of a particle and a system of particles. Motion of a rigid body in 3D, Momentum and
the moment of momentum of a rigid body with respect to a fixed frame and a rotating frame. Euler’s
dynamical equations applied to rotation about principal axes. Gyroscopic couple Applications.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
47
1. Damped vibration of a liquid colum (3 Hours)
2. Linear vibration (3 Hours)
3. Trifilar and bifilar suspension (3 Hours)
4. Taurning moment (3 Hours)
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
2. Theory of Machines
By Thomas Bevan
3. Applied Mechanics
By J Hannah and M J Miller (Longman)
5. Mechanics of Machines
Advanced Theory and Examples
By John Hannah and R C Stephens
Second Edition SI Units
(Edward Arnold)
48
Lectures = 80 hours
Combined bending and axial force; Elastic columns; Middle third rule for rectangular sections;
Middle quarter rule for circular sections.
Plasticity 06 hrs
Theory of plastic bending; Analysis of perfectly plastic beams; Plastic hinge; Collapse loads;
Elastic plastic beams; Plastic hinge; Collapse loads;
Thick walled cylinder under internal and external pressure; Shrink fitted cylinders; Hub shrunk on
solid shaft
49
Torsion of circular sections; Torsion of non – circular sections, Torsion of thin walled open
sections; closed tubes of non – circular sections; Cellular sections; Membrane analogy. Elastic –
Plastic torsion.
Testing machines; Methods of testing; Selection of test pieces; Tensile, hardness and impact
properties; Tensile – Plastic instability and its meaning in tensile test.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
1. Hardness testing
2. Tensile testing of metallic materials
3. Impact testing of metals
4. Determination of Young’s modules & modules of rigidity of metals
5. Deflection of cantilever beams
6. Torsion of prismatic bars
7. Verification of reciprocal theory
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Theory of Elasticity
by S Timoshenko and J Goodlier (McGraw Hill)]
2. Strength of Materials
by G H Ryder (Macmillan)
50
Lecture - 80 hours
Metrology 12 hrs
Basic Standards of length and angle, Effects of shape and size errors.
Geometry and mechanics of orthogonal cutting. Shear plane and shear zone models. Thermodynamics
aspects.
Joining 10 hrs
Principles and technology of fusion and solid phase welding including hot/cold, pressure, friction,
ultrasonic.
Design for joining, Properties of joints and the Control of joint quality.
Standards in joining.
Joining economics and Process selection
Casting 10 hrs
51
Manual part programming, Computer aided programming
Tools and tooling for NC machine tools.
Industrial robots and work handling systems
Categories of manufacturing systems, Flexible manufacturing cells, Flexible manufacturing systems.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
It is recommend to perform at least five (05) practicals. IESL may decide in consultation with the
Lecturer.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
4. Mechanical Measurements
by Beekwith Thomas and Buck N Lewis (Oxford and IBH Publishing Co.)
6. Production Technology
by R K Jain and C S Gupta( Khanna Publishers)
52
10. Computer Integrated Manufacturing
By P G Ranky (Prentice Hall)
Lectures = 80 hours
53
Structure of Materials 06 hrs
An overview on type of bonding, molecular and crystal structure, general physical and
mechanical properties.
Structure and Properties of Polymers; Addition and condensation polymers, co-polymers, cross-
linked polymers, degree of polymerisation, molecular weight, molecular weight distribution,
crystallinity, glass transition temperature. Physical, Chemical, and Mechanical Properties of
polymers.
Forming and Moulding Methods: Extrusion, injection moulding, compression moulding, vacuum
and blow moulding.
Composites 10 hrs
Fibre Reinforced composites; Types of strong fibres and their physical properties production of
strong fibres, manufacture of fibre reinforced composites such as metal matrix, polymer – Matrix
and ceramic – Matrix composites. Mechanics of fibre reinforcement.
Metal Casting : Solidification theory, cast structure, casting defects, annealing effect on
microstructure.
Shaping of Metals : Deformation characteristics and microstructural changes during cold working
and hot working processes.
Annealing of Deformed metals: Microstructure development during recovery, recrystallization,
and grain growth, and the changes in properties.
Steel : Plain carbon steels, equilibrium and non-equilibrium microstructures, effect of alloying
elements.
Heat treatment of steels: Normalizing, aneealing, quenching, and tempering, hardenability of
steels, TTT diagrams, continuous cooling curves.
54
Stainless Steel: Effect of Cr and Ni on the corrosion resistance. Types of stainless steel, such as
: ferritic, austenitic, and martensitic.
Cast Iron : Manufacture of cast iron, effect of alloying elements. Grey cast iron, white cast iron,
nodular cast iron, maileable iron.
Aluminium Alloys : Cast and Wrought Alloys, effect of alloying elements. Copper Alloys : Alloys
used for cast products and their applications.
Wrought alloys and their applications. Nickel and Cobalt based alloys.
Strengthening Mechanisms
Corrosion of Metals
Methods of corrosion prevention : Selection of Materials, desing, anodi and cathodic protection,
application of coatings, electroplating.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
55
PART THREE A
List of Subjects
No
301 Mathematics
302 Structural Analysis
303 Civil Engineering Construction
304 Water Engineering
305 Geotechnical Engineering
306 Structural Design – Prestressed Concrete and Steel
307 Electrical Machines II
308 Power Systems II
309 Electronic Systems Engineering
310 Communication Systems Engineering
311 Computer Systems Engineering
312 Mechanics of Solids
313 Dynamics of Mechanical Systems
314 Applied Thermodynamics
315 Highway & Traffic Engineering
316 Environmental Engineering
317 Irrigation and Water Power Engineering
318 Building Services Engineering
319 High Voltage Engineering
320 Power Electronics and Applications
321 Physical Electronics
322 Operational Research
323 Control Systems Engineering
324 Machine Design
325 Manufacturing Systems Engineering
326 Software Systems Engineering
PART THREE B
No
327 Engineering Management
PART THREE C
Project Report
56
Part III A
Optional
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
315. Highway & Traffic Engineering 80
316. Environmental Engineering 80
317. Irrigation and Water Engineering 80
318. Building Services Engineering 80
Optional
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
322. Operational Research 80
323. Control Systems Engineering 80 12
324. Machines Designs 80 12
325. Manufacturing Systems Engineering 80
Optional
57
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
311. Computer Systems Engineering 80 12
319. High voltage Engineering 80 12
320. Power Electronics & Applications 80 12
323. Control Systems Engineering 80 12
Optional
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
320. Power Electronics & Applications 80 12
321. Physical Electronics 80 12
323. Control Systems Engineering 80 12
326. Software Systems Engineering 80
Part III B
Number of Hours
Lectures Practicals
327. Engineering Management 80 -
Part III C
Project Report
58
301 MATHEMATICS
LECTURES = 80 HRS
Complex variables : analytical functions and Cauchy – Riemann equations. Cauchy’s integral formula and
applications.
Taylor and Laurent series. Contour integration. Introduction of conformal mapping.
10 hrs
Partial differential equations : classification of second-order partial differential equations. Solutions by separation of
variables. Fourier series application to boundary value problem.
08 hrs
Fourier Transform and applications : Nonperiodic function, fourier transform, properties of fourier transform and
applications.
Numerical Methods
20 hrs
Solution of sets of non-linear equations Numerical optimization problems (direct search and simple gradient
methods. Matrixe cigenvalue and eigen value determination including direct and inverse iteration and shift of simple
finite difference techniques for initial-value and boundary-value problems in ordinary and partial differential
equations and systems. Phase plane and isoclinal curves. Taylor series, Runge – Kutta process. Explicit and
implicit procedures, simple ideas on errors and stability introduction to method of characteristics.
Computing
10 hrs
Working knowledge of programming in one high-level Language (e.g. Fortran, Basic or Pascal), including sub-
programs, arrays and subscripts, strings and graphics. Use of computer packages. Algorithms , Flow diagrams
Applications in Numerical Methods and Statistics.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS.
1. Advance Mathematics for Engineers & Scientists by G S Sharma, K L Ahuja and I J S Sarma, CBS Publishers
New Delhi. Vol. I & II. (Multiple Copies)
2. Mathematics for Engineers and Scientist by Alan Jefferey
3. Schaum’s Outline series books on
Matrices Linear Algebra Vector Analysis
Calculus Advanced Calculus Differential Equations
Numerical Analysis
4. Advanced Engineering Mathematics by A C Bajpai , L R Mustoe, D Walker (Multiple Copies)
59
302 Structural Analysis
Lectures = 80 hrs
Concept of strain energy , potential energy of applied loads and total potential energy (IIP), principle of minimum
potential energy (PMPE), variational principle, Rayleigh-Ritz method, finite element formulation for simple bar and
beam elements, plane stress and plane strain, initial stress and strain effects.
Governing equation for rectangular and circular thin plates, boundary conditions, stress resultants, Navier solution ,
Finite difference method.
Membrane theory for thin shells, shells of revolution ,bending theory for closed circular cylindrical shells, boundary
conditions.
General principles and criteria of elastic instability , instability of struts and frames, Eular load for pin ended struts
and effects of other end conditions. Effects of initial curvature, stability functions, estimation of critical loads using
stability functions.
Plastic hinge and collapse concepts, Static , kinematic and uniqueness theories, collapse mechanisms, methods of
plastic design, load factor against collapse.
Behaviour of slabs near collapse, yield line patterns, yield moments , work method of analysis, equilibrium method of
analysis, affinity theorems.
Vibration problems in Engineering, free and forced vibration, single degree of freedom system and systems with few
degrees of freedom.
60
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
1. Timber testing
2. Cement mortar testing
3. Concrete mix-design
4. Tests on concrete
5. Aggregate testing
6. Computer analysis of structures (using packages)
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Structural Analysis (a unified classical & matrix approach), A Ghali, AM Neville, Chapman & Hall, London
2. Matrix Methods of Structural Analysis, R K Livesley, Pergamon Press, Oxford
3. Finite Element Method : An Introduction for the Engineer , R K Livesley , Cambridge University Press
4. Theory of Plates and Shells, S P Timoshenko, S Woinowsky – Krieger, McGraw Hill, New York
5. Thin Shells – Computing and Theory , J E Gibson Pergamon Press Oxford
6. Structural Analysis, RC Coates , MG Coutie, FK Kong, Chapman & Hall, London.
61
303 Civil Engineering Construction
Lectures = 80 hrs
Equipment used for Land clearing and earthworks : Bulldozer, Back-Hoe, Grab, Scraper, Grader, Wheel Loader,
Dredger, Dump Truck; Land clearing techniques; Large excavations, dredging, Trench excavation, Pipe laying, De-
watering, Sheet piling and Shoring Systems.
Properties of Concrete; concrete materials, Mix design, quality control, reinforcement , construction joints, plasters
and mortars, precast concrete and tolerances, prestressed concrete.
Material handling equipment on site: Hoists, Forklifts, Tower cranes ; other cranes, Dumpers, site layout of material
handling equipment; form work, concreting equipment and methods, Erection of scaffolds.
Tunnelling equipment and methods, Blasting of rock and use of explosives, quarrying and production of aggregates.
Road Construction techniques; earthmoving plant selection ; Bridge construction methods; cofferdams and work
over water ; Pile driving and Caission sinking.
Methods used for repair and renovation ; Equipment and techniques used in demolition work.
62
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
1. Setting out of a building, tunnel, bridge or any other civil engineering structure giving details of surveying
equipment used, procedures adopted and so forth.
2. Planning and execution of a road construction including site mobilization, preparation of site, site facilities,
plant selection for various operations and construction methods.
3. Planning and execution of bridge construction including site mobilization, preparation of site, site facilities,
plant selection, construction methods including coffer dams, sheet piling and work under and over water.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
63
304 Water Engineering
Lectures = 80 hrs
Introductory description and calculation of discharge for Flumes, Sluices, (With free flow and submerged flow),
weiers (sharp crested, ogee type and broad crested), spillways (weir type- morning glory and siphon types)-Energy
Dissipators.
Design of Channels in Erodible and Non Erodible, Material Criteria for Design – Economic section – Maximum and
Minimum permissible Velocities – Maximum Permissible Unit Tractive Force – Cohesive and Granular Materials.
Introduction of the Hydrological Cycle, Precipitation : Measurement of Precipitation – Estimation of Missing Data –
Tests for consistency of Data – Hyetograph –Pluviograph- computation of Mean precipitation over a given area from
gauge measurements using simple average, Theissen polygon and Isohyetal Methods – Intensity/ Frequency/
Duration Curves.
Run Off : Measurement of Run – off – flow rating curve - correction of flow rating curve- extension of flow rating
curve – Statistical Analysis of floods –Probability and Return Period – flood Frequency Analysis – gumbel and Normal
distributions – Rational Formula – Run-off Coefficient – Time of concentration.
Hydrograpy analysis : Separation of Base Flow – Infiltration – Index W Index – Estimation of Net Rainfall and
surface Run-off Unit Hydrograph Theory - Derivation of Unit Hydrography form Natural Hydrography – Conversion
of Unit Hydrograph from one duration to another – S Curve Instantaneous Unit Hydrography – Derivation of IUH
from Unit Hydrograph and Vice-versa-Synthetic Unit Hydrograph Snyder’s Method.
Design and Operation of Reservoirs : Use of the mass curve in Reservoir Capacity, Spill volume and Sustainable
Yield Studies.
Flood and Reservoir Routing : Simple techniques of Routing a flood Hydrogrph through a Reservoir and through a
section of channel – Muskingum Method.
64
Groundwater Hydrology 12 hrs
Introduction to Groundwater as a component of eth Hydrological Cycle – Types of Aquifers – Igneous, Metamorphic
and Sedimentary formations – Non indurate sediments.
Equations of Ground water Flow in Carteseian and Radial Co-ordinates for Steady and Unsteady Flow including
recharge and abstraction – Boundary and Initial Conditions – Steady State Flow in Confined and Unconfined Aquifers
with Cartesian Coordinates (one dimensional only) and radial coordinates .
Jacob’s Method – Theis Method – Analysis of Recovery Data.
Introduction to Groundwater Models – Finite Difference Digital Models – Electrical Resistance Capacitance Models.
An Introduction of the Coastal Environment – Brief Description of the Random Sea state – Methods of wave Height
Measurement – Brief Survey of Linear and Non Linear wave theories.
Linear Wave Theory : Laws governing the motion of fluids – Boundary Conditions – Development of Velocity
Potential - Kinematics and Dynamics of Sinusoidal Progressive Waves in Constant water depth – period, Celerity
and Length of waves – Classification of Water waves according to water depth (deep and shallow water
approximations) – Water particle velocities and displacements - - Group Velocity, Potential and Kinetic Energy –
Total Energy Pressure within a Progressive Wave.
Transformation of Waves : Shoaling – Refraction and Breaking of Waves – Refraction by Currents – Diffraction of
Waves – Reflection of Waves.
Note : It is recommended that the wave Tables in the Shore Protection manual of the U.S. Corps of Engineers be
used for computations in relevant sections in coastal Engineering.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
65
305 Geotechnical Engineering
Lectures = 80 hrs
Flow nets for confined and unconfined flow , isotropic and anisotropic conditions.
Critical hydraulic gradient and piping.
Elastic theory of distribution of vertical pressure. Newmaks and Fadum’s charts. Limitations of stress distribution
theories. Estimation of elastic settlement.
Concept of consolidation and settlement. Terzaghi’s theory of one dimensional consolidation. Laboratory
consolidation test, determination of coefficient of consolidation, coefficient of volume compressibility and
compression index co, e vs log p plot. Concept of degree of consolidation. Use of laboratory test results estimate
rate and amount of settlement in the field. Secondary consolidation.
Effective and total stresses; Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion in terms of effective and total stresses, c, parameters.
Methods of determination of shear strength parameters in the laboratory, direct and triaxial shear tests, unconfined
compression test. Different types of triaxial tests and use of their parameters in the field, short term and long term
behaviour. Peak and residual strength. Pore pressure parameter. Vane shear test for field determination of shear
strength.
Earth retaining structures – purpose and different types, Gravity – Mass concrete, masonry, crib walls gabion walls.
Embedded walls – sheetpile, concrete diaphragm and bored pile walls, reinforced earth etc.
Active and passive rankine states. Bsic equations, slip lines, influence of surcharge, tension crack.
Influence of friction on wall back, coulombus method of analysis. Effects of seepage, influence of drainage behind
walls. Passive resistant of rough walls.
immediate and long term considerations, Use of code (BS-CP 2) equations to estimate earth pressures.
Design of gravity retaining structures, Flexural Retaining structures – Cantilevered and laterally supported. Method of
fixed earth support, Rowe’s moment reduction factors.
Need to quantify stability of slopes, modes of slope instability. Methods of analysis of slope instability;
Homogeneous slopes – Friction circle method and Taylor’s stability charts, Stratified slopes - Swedish slices method,
Bishop’s simplified method, Wedge methods. Time dependence of stability – short term and long term behaviour.
66
Foundations 10 hrs
Types of foundations – Shallow foundations, deep foundation. Requirements for satisfactory foundations; Shallow
Foundations, ultimate bearing capacity, Bearing capacity equations Terzaghi’s bearing capacity factors, Short Term
and long term stability, Bearing capacity in stratified soils, allowable bearing capacity, Estimation of settlements in
sands by standard penetration test, Pressuer distribution under foundations rigid analysis , flexible analysis, Design
of foundations with and without soil structure interaction – Applications to combined footings and raft foundations.
Requirements for satisfactory foundations : Different types of pile foundations with their advantages, disadvantages
and uses ; determination of bearing capacity of a single pile, Dynamic or pile driving formulae, and pile load tests;
settlement computation of a single pile, carrying capacity of a pile group, settlement computation of pile groups,
Negative skin friction.
Engineering properties of Rock Materials, Engineering classification of rock; Rock Mass, Influence of joints and
fractures, Strength characteristics, Laboratory measurements of engineering properties.
Consolidation Test
Direct Shear Test
Triaxial Test
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
Soil Mechanics
Engineering Geology
67
306 Structural Design – Pre-stressed Concrete and Steel
Lectures = 40 hrs
Basic Principles : concept of Pre-stressing – historical development advantages and disadvantages, applications of
pre-stressed concrete.
Different Types of Pre-stressing : Pre Tensioning & post tensioning, internal & external pre-stressing , bonded &
non bonded pre-stressing.
Tendon Profile : Eccentricity of prestressing force, variation of prestress , debonding , deflected tendons.
Concepts used in design : Full prestressing & partial prestressing, classification of prestressed concrete members,
load balancing technique.
Prestressing systems & anchorages : Different types, bursting force anchorage zones, transmission length
Important phases in loading for pre-stressed concrete members, stress distributions and allowable stresses under
service and transfer conditions, stress criterion of SLS design.
Selection of section
Expressions for minimum section modulus.
Design of presetressing force-Magnel diagram.
Permissible tendon zone.]
Arrangement to tendon; cover & spacing requirements.
Flow chart for design of PC members.
Ultimate load behaviour: simplified stress block, variation of steel stress, calculation of moment capacity, strain
compatibility method, code formula & tables.
Failure modes in shear, shear capacity of uncracked and cracked sections, design of shear reinforcement.
68
Deflections 01 hr
Introduction 06 hrs
Introduction to steel as a structural material, Applications of steel, Types of steel sections, productions of structural
steel, composition and properties of structural steel, corrosion and corrosion protection.
Types and uses, types of sections used, net area and effective area, tensile capacity of members, eccentric
connections, Examples.
Compression members in different structures, sections used, behaviour and failure modes of compression members,
classification of cross sections, effective length , slenderness limits, capacity of axially loaded columns, laced and
battened struts, discontinuous struts, Examples.
Types and uses, sections used, failure modes in flexure classification of beam cross sections, in-plane bending of
beams, moment capacity, shear in beams, lateral torsional buckling, effective length, design approach, design of
built-up sections, local buckling effects in beams, web stiffeners, examples.
Types and uses , combined tension and bending combined compression and bending , Biaxial bending.
Types of Connections : Welded and bolted connections Modes of failure, general principles of connection design,
capacity of connections, connections in structural work : beam to beam column to column, beam and column splices,
truss connections .
Course work :
Course work must include load evaluation element design and connection design of a steel structure.
69
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Pre-stressed concrete design course work must include the design of a highway bridge deck, a gantry girder, a
pedestrian bridge deck or floor beam as a class 1 or class 2 pre-tensioned or post tensioned member.
1. Load evaluation
2. Selection of a section
3. Selection of prestressing force using Magnel diagram
4. Tendon zone and tendon arrangement
5. calculation of prestress losses
6. Check for ULS of flexure
7. Design for shear
8. Check for deflection
9. Detailing
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
Steel Design
(1) BS : 5950 : Structural use of steel work in buildings ; Part I : Code of Practice for Design Simple &
continuous construction : Hot Rolled Section. British Standards Institute.
(2) Steel Designers Manual (5th Edition)
Steel construction Institute
(3) Steelwork Design Guide to BS 5950 : Part I Vol. 1 : Section Properties, Member Capacities. The Steel
Construction Institute, Ascot 1987
(4) Steel work design guide to BS 5950 : Part I Vol. 2 : Worked Examples. The Steel construction Institute,
Ascot 1986
(5) T J MacGinley & T.c. Ang.
Structural Steelwork : Design to Limit State Theory – Second edition, Butterworth – Heinmann 1992
(6) L H Martin & J A Purkiss
Structural Design of Steelwork to BS 5950 Edward Arnold 1992
(7) N S Trahair & M S Bradford
The Behaviour & Design of Steel Structures, Chapman & Hall 1988
(8) T Draycott , Structural Elements Design Manual (Heinemann Newnes)
(9) L J Morris & D R Plum, Structural Steelwork Design to BS 5950
(10) D A Nethercot, Limit State Design of Structural Steelwork (Chapman Hall)
(11) S A Lavan & B G Fletcher, Students Guide to Structural Design
(Butterworths)
70
307 Electrical Machines II
Lectures = 80 hrs
Main Design parameters and their relation to machine performance ; electric and magnetic loading; output power
equations of ac and dc machines ; factors affecting size of machine; choic of specific loadings, no. of poles, diameter
and length of core, air gap length, standard frames.
AC Windings 08 hrs
Electrical Angle, Emf Polygon, phase grouping, phase spread, advantages of double layer windings over single layer
windings arrangement of double layer integral slot windings, short pitched windings, selection of number of parallel
paths per phase. Flux per pole, induced emf of concentrated fully pitched windings, distribution factor pitch factor
and winding factor : all these of fundamental and harmonics, effects of harmonics Mmf distribution of concentrated
and distributed windings, effects of short pitching on mmf.
Construction of hydro generators and turbo-alternators; equivalent circuits for cylindrical rotor and salient pole types
(two – axis theory), operating characteristics, power factor control, v-curves, power angle characteristics,
synchronizing power , concept of stability, hunting and damper windings, measurement of Xs, Xd, Xq; effects of
saturation on synchronizing to infinite bus bars ; power sharing between parallel generators; excitation systems ;
transient behaviour of synchronous generators.
AC Commutator Motor
Construction, operating principle, starting and running performance, areas of application.
PM Brushless de motor
Construction : operating principles, controlling, performance comparison with other types of motors areas of
application
Stepper Motor
Construction of different types ; methods of controlling , drive circuits, operating characteristics, areas if application.
Harmonic generation by synchronous and induction machines, transformers and power converters, time and space
harmonics, harmonics in air gap mmf, harmonic performance of induction, dc, synchronous machines and
transformers, their harmonic equivalent circuits.
71
Introduction to Drives 04 hrs
Comparison of controlled drives, drive specifications load characteristics of common applications, transducers used in
a drive, principles of closed loop control, measurement of system parameters such as inertia.
Circuit Diagrams, operating principles, device ratings, controlling methods, dynamic model of following types of
power converters, single-phase and three – phase bridge rectifiers (fully and half controlled), dual converter, self
commutated dc-dc converters (choppers) classes A-E, Self-commutated dc-ac converters (inverters) voltage source
type with PWM operation.
Steady – state operation of separately – excited dc motor fed by rectifiers, armature voltage and field voltage
control, rectifiers for 1,2, & 4 quadrant operation of dc motors, continuous and discontinuous conduction, starting
and breaking dc series motor drives. Steady – state operation of chopper fed separately – excited dc motors,
armature voltage control and field voltage control , pulse width control and current control, current ripple and its
effects, switching frequency comparison with rectifier red drives, dc series motor drives
Dynamics and closed loop control, elements and their dynamic models of a closed loop speed control system with
inner current loop using a separately excited dc motor, operation of this system for input command changes and
load changes.
Variable frequency operation using voltage source and current source inverters, six-step and PWM modes of control,
elements of closed loop speed control l system, 1, 2 & 4 quadrant operation, starting and breaking;
Control criteria : Constant volts per Hertz control, torque control, flux control, vector controlled drives.
Variable voltage drives ; drives using wound rotor induction motors (slip power recovery methods)
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
72
308 Power Systems II
Lectures = 80 hrs
Energy economy interaction, GDP elasticity, demand forecasting, policy analysis and energy planning.
Supply side issues of energy management
Demand side issues of energy management, End user energy conservation and efficiency improvement.
Economic operation of a power system considering transmission losses, merit order loading.
Long term and short term planning
Reliability and probabilistic production costing, Availability, Mean Time to Failure (MTTF)
Loss of load Probability (LOLP), etc.
Steady state stability : Power angel diagram, effect of voltage regulation, swing equation.
Transient stability , equal area criterion, stability under fault conditions, step by step solution of swing equation.
Stability and control issues of an isolates small power systems in remote areas or small islands, wind/diesel,
hydro/diesel, solar/diesel, etc, Hybrid systems
Generator control
Machine modeling for steady state and transient operation
Active power and frequency control
Reactive power and voltage control
Control characteristics of hydro, thermal, nuclear wind and other different categories of power plants
Ungrounded, effectively grounded, resistance grounded, reactance grounded and resonant grounded systems.
Substation earthing.
Choice of route, types of towers, conductor spacing and configuration. Sag and span calculations, sag templates,
stringing charts.
73
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
2. Fault Analysis :
Use dc network analyzer and digital computer for unbalanced fault analysis of a power system.
3. Transmission studies I :
Power angle diagram, study of power angle Vs. Power flow along transmission lines, Power factor
correction.
4. Transmission Studies II :
Study of quadrature and in-phase boosting for active and reactive power flow control of parallel
transmission lines.
5. Peterson Coil
Study of arc suppression coil.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. A K Sawhney , A Course in Electrical Machine Design, Dhanpat Rai & sons , Delhi, 5th edition, 1984
2. M G Say, Alternating Current Machines , Longman Scientific & Technical, Essex , 5th Edition, 1983.
3. P S Bimbhra, Electrical Machinery, Khanna Publishers, Delhi, 4th Edition 1992
4. G R Slemon, Electric Machines and Drives, Addison- Wesley Publishing Company Inc., 1992
5. P C Sen, Principles of Electric Machines and Power Electronics, John Wiley & Sons , 1989.
REFERENCE
1. K K Y W Perera, Energy Status of Sri Lanka, Institute of Policy Studies, Sri Lanka (1992)
2. Olle I , Elgerd : Electric Energy Systems Theory, Tata Mc Graw Hioll ( New Delhi, New York)
3. V K Mehta, Principles of Power System, S Chand and Co. Ltd, (New Delhi)
4. B M Weedy “: Electric Power Systems , John Wiley 7 Sons (New York)
5. Allan J Wood, Brue F , Wollenbers : Power Generation Operation and Control, John Wiley & Sons (New
York).
74
309 Electronic Systems Engineering
Lectures = 80 hrs
Design of Active Filters, oscillators circuits, comparator circuits, Schmidtt triggersl analog computers.
Principle of Operation of class A, B, AB, C & d power amplifiers, derivation of power efficiency, effects on wave form
distortion, power BJTs and MOSFET devices, thermal dissipation, practical circuits, audio power amplifier, HF Power
amplifiers.
Silicon Controlled Rectifiers (SCR) : construction, characteristics and circuits , DIACS and TRIACS : Construction ,
characteristics and circuits, optoelectronic devices Photodiodes and transistors, LEDS Opto-couplers, LCDs, UJTs and
applications in control circuits.
PLDs, : Basic organization, Principles of operation, applications & typical ICs , classification of memories, basic
memory cells of ROM, EPROM, EEPROM, static & dynamic RAM, internal organizations, typical pin organization of
common memory packages.
Non Neuman model of a computer, LSI and VLSI devices used in microcomputer systems ; CPU Organisation,
machine code, assembly programming and high level language concepts ;
Hardware and the architecture of a representative microprocessor, pin organization, interfacing to memory ,
instruction set, user level registers, assembly programming.
General interface concepts ; common peripherals and their interface circuits (keyboard, printer, VDU), common
serial and parallel interface standards; interface buses; IEEE-488 instrumentation bus.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Bogart, F.G., Electronic Devices and Circuits, Bell & Howell Company
2. Toci, R.J., Digital Systems, Principles and Applications, Prentice Hall.
3. Horowitz, P.& Hill, W ., The Art of Electronics, Cambridge University Press.
4. Millman, J & Grebel, A., Microelectronics, Mc Graw-Hill.
75
310 Electronic Systems Engineering
Lectures = 80 hrs
Introduction to communication systems and basic elements, application of Fourier analysis for communication
system analysis, application of statistical tools for analysis of noise performance of communication systems,
Application of information theory for communication system analysis.
Overview of the public telephone system, Types of analog/digital services, Voice /Data services, Types of
Wireline/Wirelss communication channels, Principles of Analog transmission, Principles of Digital transmission,
Design parameters for transmission channels/ equipment ; Principles of Switching, Evolutions towards ISDN and
SDH, Statistical characterization of teletraffic, Grade of service, dimensioning of circuits and switches.
Operation of paging, trunked mobile radio and cellular systems, Base station and mobile station equipment and their
operation.
Use of LF, MF, HF and VHF bands for radio broadcasting, Types of transmitters, antennas, other equipment for radio
broadcasting, principles of radio receivers
Principles of monochrome and colour TV, NTSC, SECAM and Pal systems, Transmission equipment, TV receivers
Circuit and packet switching , Layered architectures, commonly used protocols, Local area networks, and wide area
networks.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Due to the complexity of modern communication systems , mini projects are proposed instead of conventional
practicals. A student must do at least two individual mini projects, related to two different types of communication
systems, covering a specific item of the system under the supervision of a competent communication
lecturer/engineer.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
Communication systems, third edition – AB Carlson
Analog and digital Communication – Simon Haykin
Principles of communication systems – Taub and Schilling
Television Principles and Practice - - J S Zarach
Mobile communication systems – WCY Lee
Data communication – DC Green
Radio Communication - GG Chawla
Telecommunication Economics – T J organ
Electronic Switching – GRINSEC
76
311 Computer Systems Engineering
Lectures = 80 hours
Introduction
Historical development: influence of computers on society and industry; basic components of a computer;
classification of computers; micros, minis, mainframes, supercomputers, portable computers, very small computers.
Functional operation of information processing machine (digital computer); stored program concept; sequential
computers; von-Neumann Architecture (SISD); uniprocessor, coprocessor, and multiprocessor systems; SIMD and
MIMD machines.
Number representation: binary, octal, hexadecimal, and binary coded decimal; integer, fixed point, floating point
formats; sign and magnitude representation, two’s complement, excess-n; number range and precision; IEEE
floating point standard; fixed and floating point arithmetic operations; error codes: parity, Hamming.
Processor Design
Bus architectures: single, double, and triple; critical race problem; register structure: special purpose registers,
general purpose registers, flags; instruction execution cycle; function types: load, store, arithmetic, logical, control
transfers, use of stacks, procedure entry and exit, input/output; instruction formals, one address, zero address;
addressing modes; instruction decoding and implementation, microprogramming; RISC and CISC architectures.
Data transfer techniques, polling, interrupts, DMA; bus systems (unidirectional, bi-directional, tristate); bus control,
handshaking; memory mapped devices, vectored interrupts, and priority levels.
Characteristics and operating principles of peripheral devices; printers, plotters, VDUs , modems, graphic devices;
Data acquisition systems, ADC, DAC; interface requirements, programmable interfaces; data communication
techniques, serial, parallel, synchronous, asynchronous; standards RS 232 IEEE 488, VME, IEEE 796/ multibus; real-
time applications.
Principles of storage devices; storage hierarchy , levels of storage; access methods, sequential access, random
access; semiconductor memory, dynamic and static momory; on-line storage, magnetic and optical devices; virtual
memory.
Computer Networks
Communication networks, LANs, WANs, MANs, Internet, Intranets; topology, speed, and access mechanisms;
protocols, ISO – OSI reference model; examples of and features of the physical , data link and network layers of
typical networks such as Ethernet, token bus, X. 25; use modems.
System Software
Operating systems; real – time systems, compilers, linkers, interpreters, loaders, diagnostic and debugging tools,
and other utilities; user/software/hardware interfaces, functions and features of the interfaces; operating
environments, text based, GUI based; network operating systems;
77
Recommended Texts
1. Zaks R., “An Introduction to Microprocessors,” Sybex Berkeley, USA, B.P B. Publications, New Delhi, India, 1985
2. Sayers I.L. et. Al, “ Principles of Microprocessors,” CRC Press, Inc., 2000 Corporate Blvd., N.W. , Boca Roton,
FL 33431 , USA , 1991.
3. Boyce J. C., “ Microprocessor and Microcomputer Basics,” Prentice Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 07632 ,
USA, 1979
4. Holdsworth B., “ Microprocessor Engineering,” Butterworths and Co, Ltd., UK, 1987.
78
312 MECHANICS OF SOLIDS
Lectures = 80 Hours
Plasticity* 04 Hours
Fracture concepts
Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics:
Strain energy release rate, Stress Intensity Factor.
Fracture mechanics for ductile materials.
79
Fatigue 08 Hours
Recommended Books
Highly Recommended
1. Mechanics of Engineering Materials, Benham P.P., Crawford R. J. Longman Sc. & Tech., 1988.
Also Recommended
80
313 DYNAMICS OF MECHANICAL SYSTEMS
Lectures = 80 Hours
Distinction between boundary and film lubrication. Reynolds equation in 2D, tilting pad type thrust bearings,
Comparison of load capacities and minimum film thicknesses. Journal bearings and externally pressurized bearings.
Vibration 32 Hours
Introduction to other methods of vibration analysis such as Impedance Method, receptance method and Stodola’s
method
Mathematical modeling of dynamic systems and their representation using Block diagrams and Signal flow graphs.
Laplace transformation and transfer functions.
Transient response analysis of first and second order linear systems subjected to impulse, step and ramp inputs.
Determination of absolute stability suing Routh – Hurwitz criterion. System analysis suing Root-Loci.
Frequency response analysis. Polar plots, Nyquist stability criterion, Bode Plots. Determination of Gain margins and
Phase margins.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
7. Dynamics of Physical Systems, Robert A. Cannon, Jr. (McGraw – Hill Book Co.)
81
314 Applied Thermodynamics
Lectures = 80 Hours
Gas turbine cycles; effect of intercooling, reheating, and heat exchange. Influence of component efficiencies,
pressure ratio and maximum cycle temperature on overall performance.
Practical vapour compression refrigeration cycles; effect of state of working fluid at compressor inlet and condenser
outlet; cascade circuits. Qualitative treatment of simple ammonia –water absorption cycle.
Mixtures of gases and vapors; reaction between specific and molar properties. Application to condenser and cooling
towers. Psychrometry; principles of air conditioning and the elementary analysis of air conditioning plant.
Factors limiting the performance of spark ignition and compression ignition engines. Performance testing; indicator
diagrams; Morse Test.
Conduction 12 Hours
Steady conduction with plane, cylindrical and spherical isothermal boundaries and with internal heat generation;
development of finite difference equations for the solution of steady two dimensional and unsteady one dimensional
conduction.
Convection 10 Hours
Surface and overall heat transfer coefficients. Velocity and temperature boundary layers. Natural and forced
conventions over flat plates and inside pipes.
Radiation 08 Hours
Heat transfer by radiation. Law of radiant heat transfer for black and gray bodies. Black and gray body radiation for
simple configurations.
Heat transfer from extended surfaces; parallel flow and counter flow heat exchangers. Mean temperature difference.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
I Compulsory Practicals
1. Refrigeration apparatus
2. Trail on Tangy Engine
3. Trial on Cochran boiler
4. Trial on stem turbine
5. Orsat’s apparatus
6. Hydraulic simulation of heat transfer
82
II Optional Practicals
1. Heat pump
2. Forced convection heat transfer apparatus
3. Separating and throttling calorimeter
4. Trail on air compressor
5. Trial on Perkin’s engine
6. Field plotter
7. Lagging test
It is recommended to perform at least ten (10) practicals. IESL may select practicals form the optional list.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
II Applied Thermodynamics
6. The Internal Combustion Engine in theory and Practice Volumes I & 2 by C. F. Taylor
II Fluid Mechanics
6. Mechanics of Fluids (Section 1,2,3,5& 6) by B S Massy (Van Nostrand Reinhold Company Ltd.)
83
315 HIGHWAY & TRAFFIC ENGINEERING
Lectures = 80 Hours
Soils, aggregates and binders-their types, physical properties, testing and evaluation of properties and functions in
highway construction.
Construction of bases, sub-bases, soil stabilization, phalt as concrete and flexible pavement design; investigations,
design procedures, specifications construction methods, equipment used, quality control and testing procedures.
Introduction to geometric Design, Considerations in the selection of a route for a new road, vertical and horizontal
alignment, design of carriageway, maximum axle loads, sidewalks, pedestrian crossings, parking, signs and read
markings, turning bays, climbing lanes, bicycle lanes and passing lanes and street lighting.
Quality of riding surface, types of road failures and appropriate maintenance methods, maintenance programs and
standards and specifications for road and bridge works.
Methods of data collection, traffic surveys, determination of sample sizes and survey procedures; analysis of data
and statistical tests, survey in transportation and data collection.
Basic traffic theory of flow, speed and density, their inter-relationships, methods of measurement, determination of
highway capacity and levels of service and identification of element for geometric design of roads.
Properties of speed, flow and density under deterministic and stochastic conditions and their applications in traffic
systems management.
Pedestrian, Bicycle and Bullock-cart movement; needs separation of fast and slow traffic and safety.
84
316 ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
Lectures = 80 Hours
Discussion of need of microbiology for environmental engineers, types and characteristics of unicellular and
multicellular microorganisms, classification of bacteria based on carbon source, energy source and electron donor,
and other classifications based on requirement of oxygen, cardinal temperatures etc., types of bacteria significant in
Environmental Engineering indicator organisms, enumeration of bacteria-plate counts, multiple tube fermentation
technique and membrane filtration technique, significance of other microorganisms in Environmental Engineering.
Water borne, water washed, water based and water related insect vector caused diseases and their control, the
chain of infection and its links (causative agent, portal of exit, route of transmission, portal of entry and susceptible
host), common diseases in Sri Lanka, their causative agents, signs and symptoms, incubation periods, carriers and
methods of control.
Principles and design concepts of the following conventional water treatment unit operations-Aeration,
Sedimentation, Coagulation, Flocculation, Filtration, Disinfection, Stabilization.
Miscellaneous water treatment operations – softening, iron removal, desalinization, removal of organic,
contaminants.
Design and operational principles of conventional biological waste water treatment (aerobic and anaerobic)
Water pollution – self-purification of streams, DO sag equation, water quality standards, toxic materials, ground
water contamination, methods of control of surface and ground water pollution.
Air Pollution – Stationary and mobile sources of air pollution, primary and secondary pollutants, air quality standards,
local, regional and global effects of air pollution, health aspects and control measures.
Noise and vibration - noise levels and measurement of noise, standards, effects and reduction methods of noise and
vibration.
Solid and Hazardous Waste Disposal - Quantities and characteristics of solid waste, storage, collection, transport,
and disposal methods of solid waste, definition of hazardous waste, the ‘cradle to grave’ approach of handling
hazardous waste.
85
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
2. Jar Test - determination of coagulant dose and variation of coagulation dose with characteristics of
the water.
3. Variation of water quality and head in different units in a water treatment plant. (done on a field visit)
4. Sludge Characteristics
5. Operational parameters of Activated Sludge treatment of waste water (done on a field visit)
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Principles of Water Quality Control - Fourth edition ( 1992 ) or latest edition – T H Y Tebbutt, Pergamon Press
2. Physicochemical Processes: for water Quality Control – Walter J Weber, John Wiley and Sons, New York.
3. Environmental Health Engineering in the Topics : An Introductory Text – Sandy Cairncross and Richard
G Feachem, John Wiley and Sons, New York.
4. Water Treatment Plant Design for the Practicing Engineer – Robert L Sanks – Ann Arbor Seience.
5. Water and Waste Water Engineering, Vol II – G M Gair, J C Geyer and D A Okun, Wiley, New York,
6. Microbiology for Sanitary Engineers - R E McKinney, McGraw Hill, New York.
7. Microbiology for Environmental and Public Health Engineers- (1998) Robert M Steritt and John W Lester,
E & F N Spon, London.
8. Chemistry for Sanitary Engineers - C N Sawyer and P L McCarty, McGraw Hill
9. Water and Wastewater Technology – Mark J Hammer, John Wiley and Sons.
10. Wastewater Engineering- Treatment, Disposal, Reuse-3rd Edition – Metcalf & Eddy McGraw Hill, New York.
11. Introduction to Environmental Engineering- M L Davis and D A Cornwall McGraw Hill, Hew York.
12. Biological Wastewater Treatment Systems: Theory and Operation – N J Horan , John Wiley & Son, New York.
13. Air Pollution – A J Stem, Academic Press, USA
14. Solid Waste Management in Developing Countries – A D Bhide and B B Sundaresan,
Indian National Scientific Documentation Centre, New Delhi
86
317 IRRIGATION AND WATER POWER ENGINEERING
Lectures = 80 Hours
Soil – Plant – Water Relationships, Soil Moisture Storage, Water Available to the Plant, Field Capacity, Permanent
Wilting Point, Infiltration, Reference Crop Evapotranspiration, Crop Growth Stages, Crop Coefficient, Crop
Evapotranspiration, Effective Rainfall, Water Balance Concept, Efficiency Concepts.
Power Potential of a Stream, Catchment Yield, Gross and Net Head, Efficiency Concept, Units of Power, Firm and
Surplus Power.
Surface Irrigation, Border and Furrow Irrigation, Sprinkler and lift Irrigation, Sub Surface Irrigation, Wetting
Patterns, Field Irrigation Requirement, Object of Water Management, Methods of Water Issue, Preparation of
Irrigation Schedules, Reservoir Operation.
Micro Hydro-mini Hydro-ordinary Hydro-Low Head-High Head-Run of River-Storage or pumped Storage Systems,
Impulse and Reaction Turbines: Francis, Kaplan and Pelton Wheel-Efficiency-Cavitation-Operational and Specific
Speeds, Diversion Structure, Penstock, Power House, Distribution, Surge Tanks, Tailrace, Valley-Dam Power Plant
and Under Ground Power Station Layouts.
Multipurpose Projects, Cost-benefit Analysis, Method of Discounting, Time Value of Money, Financial and Economic
Costs and Benefits, Cash Flow Diagrams and Interest Computations, Project Feasibility, Environmental considerations
and Valuation.
RECOMMENDED TEXTS
Irrigation: Design and Practice, Bruce Withers & Stanley Vipond, Batsford Academic & Educational Limited London.
Water-Resources and Agricultural Development in the Tropics, Chris Barroow, Longman Scientific & Technical
Applied Hydraulics in Engineering, H M Morris & J M Wiggert, John Wiley & Sons
87
318 BUILDING SERVICES ENGINEERING
Lectures = 80 Hours
Introduction
Building Services Engineering is concerned with the human, scientific, technical and economic aspects of design,
construction and maintenance of all engineering associated with the built environment, other than its structure, as
well as with similar elements associated with certain industrial processes.
Design of sanitary and storm water drainage systems for buildings and a knowledge of the Construction and
Maintenance requirements of such systems – design loadings and components in a system, piping layouts, piping
materials, sand interceptors, oil and grease separators, sewage backflow preventing devices, cleanouts, interception
of volatile fluids, piping sleeves, vent systems and local regulations.
Basic knowledge in design, operation and maintenance requirements of waste water system for laundry machines
and parking area drainage.
Detail knowledge in carrying out site inspections and tests on drainage systems and their maintenance procedures.
Plumbing Fixtures: Demand and dischange rates of plumbing fixtures, prohibited fixtures and connection, special
fixtures, minimum facilities, capacities of plumbing stacks in buildings and sloping drains.
Basic knowledge in cost estimating of sanitary and storm water drainage systems.
Identification of water requirements for various types of buildings. Design of water supply system in the building –
quality standards, design loads, pipe layouts, and materials, colour codes, air-gaps, backflow preventers, drinking –
fountain standards, pressure regulators and calculation of capacities of pumps.
Basic knowledge in installation methods and maintenance requirements of potable water systems.
Detail knowledge in carrying out site inspections and tests including disinfection of piping and maintenance
procedures.
Knowledge of the principal criteria for assessing the fire properties of building construction materials. These
properties are : Combustibility, ignitability, fire propagation and rate of surface spread of flame. Discuss concept of
fire load density. Outline the principles of means of escape in case of fire and also the provision of access for fire
appliances to buildings for fire fighting purposes.
Outline the use, siting, and maintenance of portable fire extinguishers, and extinguishing equipment.
Explain the principle requirements of fire safety, fire precautionary and fire legislation and their attendance code of
practice, rules and regulations.
Outline the design features, commissioning, operations and maintenance of the fixed installations – sprinkler
systems, hose reels and fire detection systems.
88
Heating Systems 05 Hours
Types of boiler plant and installation methods. Assessment of fuel storage requirements. Design of a central,
multiple boiler installation and control of heating circuits. Analysis of part-load operation and system efficiency.
Water Treatment requirements.
Determination of supply and extract volumes, design air distribution circuits and network analysis. Prediction of room
air distribution, location of supply and extract grilles and diffusers. Fan selection and characteristics. Air filtration,
standards and methods of filter testing, applicability of test data. Sound control and vibration isolation. Ventilation
of hazardous environments, extract hood and fume cupboard design.
Basic knowledge in cost estimating of ventilation systems.
Analysis of air conditioning cycles, determination of room, zone, and plant loads. Load charts for plant operation and
control strategy.
Design philosophy and principles of air conditioning systems, single duct, dual duct, variable air volume, fan coil and
induction systems. Ventilation and Heat Pump recovery systems, applications, operations, control, and economics.
Selection of heating, cooling and dehumidifying coils, capacity control, part load performance. Dynamic response of
the building and plant under transient load conditions.
Performance characteristics of reciprocating, centrifugal and screw compressors, condensers and evaporators.
Multiple chiller plant, series and parallel operation and control.
The design and critical analysis of distribution systems suitable for various building types.
Cable types and their application and sizing within and around a building. Protection against overload, short-circuit
and indirect contact. Fault condition, prediction of maximum short – circuit and minimum earth – fault currents.
Current protective devices for short – circuit and overload protection within buildings. Use of back-up protection.
Lamps and characteristics, the selection of luminaries by performance and economic parameters for a given
environment. The design of lighting system for specialized application, eg. Hazardous areas, hospitals, museums,
art galleries, etc. Integrated ceiling systems. Emergency and escape lighting.
89
Basic knowledge in design, installation, commissioning & operation of lifts, escalators, Building maintenance
management systems, telephone systems, public address systems, closed circuit T V systems, and lightning
protection systems.
1. A C Panchdhari, “ Water Supply and Sanitary Installations – (within buildings) , Design, construction
and maintenance”, Wiley Eastern Ltd, 1993
2. Louis Blendermann, “ Design of Pluming and Drainage Systems”, Industrial Press Inc., 2nd Edition, 1963
4. IEE Wiring Regulations 16th Edition “Requirements for Electrical Installations” BS 771 : 1992
5. CIBSE Guide
90
319 HIGH VOLTAGE ENGINEERING
Lectures = 80 Hours
Ionization processes, Breakdown of gases: electron avalanche mechanism Townsend current growth, Paschen’s Law,
Streamer Theory of breakdown, Time lags of spark breakdown.
Breakdown in Liquids: Breakdown due to gaseous inclusion , liquid globules, solid particles.
Breakdown of solid insulating materials: Intrinsic breakdown, electromechanical breakdown, breakdown due to
internal discharges, surface breakdown, thermal breakdown, electro-chemical breakdown, chemical deterioration.
Lightning stroke mechanism: frequency of occurrence of flashes. Transmission lines: Shielding by earth wires,
shielding angle, area of attraction to lightning. Direct strokes to phase conductor, tower, earth wire. Indirect
strokes.
Surges on transmission lines: Surge impedance and velocity of propagation. Energy stored in surge. Reflection of
traveling waves at a junction, bewley lattice diagram, reflection and transmission at a T – junction. Transform
Methods of solving transients.
Classification of high voltage cables. Power loss in the cable: dielectric loss, conductor loss, sheath loss, inters heath
loss; Cross-bonding of cables. Insulation resistance and capacitance of single phase and three phase cables.
Copper space factor.
Di- electric stress in single core cable: Cable grading for uniform stress distribution, capacitance grading, intersheath
grading.
Thermal design of cables: current rating. Thermal resistance of single-core cables, three-core cables, protective
coverings, ground around cable, cables exposed to air.
Direct measurement of High Voltages: Electrostatic voltmeters, sphere gaps, Transformer and potential divider
methods of measurement: Transformer ratio method, Resistive potential divider, capacitive klydonograph, peak
reading voltmeters, oscilloscope for measurement of fast transients.
Measurement of capacitance and loss tangent: High voltage Schering bridge, dielectric loss measurement using
oscilloscope, detection of internal discharges, measurement of dielectric constant and dissipation factor of a liquid
dielectric using resonance.
Generation of high direct voltage: rectifier circuits, voltage multiplier circuits. Electrostatic generators: van de Graeff
generator, sames generator.
High voltage impulse generators: Double exponential waveform, calculation of coefficients a and b from resistance
and capacitance values, definition of wavefront and wavetail times of practical waveforms.
Uncontrolled operation, controlled operation of impulse generator, Trigatron gap. Multi-stage impulse generators.
Generation of chopped impulse waveforms.
91
High Voltage Testing
General tests carried out on high voltage equipment: sustained low-frequency tests, high voltage direct current
tests, surge tests. Type tests, sample tests, routine tests.
Testing of solid dielectric materials: determination of dielectric strength.
Surge protection: Spark gaps for surge protection, expulsion tube lightning arrestor, surge diverters; selection of
surge diverters, separation limit for lightning arrestors.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
3. Corona characteristics
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
2. High Voltage Engineering by Ms. Naidu and V Kamaraju, Tata McGraw- Hill, 1990
5. Extra High voltage AC Transmission Engineering by R D Begamudre. Wiley Eastern Ltd, 1990
6. The Protection of Transmission Systems against Lightning by W W Lewis, Dover Publications, 1965
92
320 POWER ELECTRONICS AND APPLICATIONS
Lectures = 80 Hours
Devices 18 Hours
Heavy current high voltage devices: characteristics of diodes, thyristors, triacs, gate turn off thyristors, power hipolar
and MOS transistors, insulated gate bipolar transistors, other MOS-bipolar hybrid devices.
Protection: over current and over voltage protection, di/dt and dv/dt limiting, switching aid (snubber) networks with
and without energy recovery, lossless snubbers, temperature effects and cooling, thermal resistance and impedance,
heat sink designs.
Drive circuits: power and s peed of drive circuit, isolation with optical and transformer methods (including pulse
transformers), power integrated circuits.
AC to DC Converters 16 Hours
Phase controlled converters: single and three phase bridge converters, half and fully controlled types, characteristics
with passive and active (motor) loads, inversion mode, continuous and discontinuous current, commutation overlap,
12 and 24 pulse circuits, transformer connection and ratings, influence on supply, harmonics.
Control of converters; linear firing angle control, cosine-wave crossing method of control, phase-locked –loop
control.
PWM rectifiers: active line current shaping, single, and three phase types.
DC to DC Converters 10 Hours
PWM Converters: buck, boost, buck-boost and cuk converters, single, two and four quadrant operation, isolation and
multiple outputs.
Resonant link converters: resonant converters, half and full bridge types, zero-voltage and zero- current switching,
series, parallel, quasi and multi resonance converters.
DC to AC Converters 20 Hours
Voltage fed inverters: square wave single and three phase inverters, self and forced commutated types, operation
with 180 and 120 conduction, performance with inductive loads, harmonics, constant volts/hertz operation.
Current fed inverters: load and forced commutated (auto sequential) inverters.
PWM Inverters : sinusoidal PWM with natural and uniform sampling, single and three phase operation, harmonic
elimination PWM, current control PWM with hysteresis and predictive (space vector) control, PWM with current fed
inverters, PWM Inverter- PWM rectifier double converter systems (voltage fed and current fed types), PWM direct
frequency changes and cycloconverters
Resonant inverters: single and three phase resonant inverters, resonant dc-link and resonant as-link types, voltage
fed and current fed operations.
Application 16 Hours
Specialized applications: static Var and harmonic compensators, high frequency induction heating, electroplating,
high frequency fluorescent lighting, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS), electrical machines control, as voltage
regulators, electric locomotives, power line filters etc.
93
Application specific integrated circuits (ASICS)
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
3. Power Electronics
Devices, Drives and Applications
MacMillan
B W Williams
4. Power Electronics
Converters, applications, and Design
John Wiley & Sons
Hed Mohan, Tore M Undeland, William P Robbins
Lectures = 80 Hours
Bipolar transistor and its small signal ac equivalent circuit; hybrid model and the high frequency performance of the
transistor; switching properties of the transistor.
Field effect transistor, MOSFET, and MESFET.
Charge coupled devices, SCR, DIAC, TRIAC and UJT.
Microelectronics 10 Hours
94
Optoelectronic Devices 15 Hours
Principles of laser action; solid-state lasers, gas lasers; semiconductor lasers.
Optical emitters and sensors: LED, LD, PIN-PD, APD, Photo cells.
Solar cells and solar panels.
LCD displays ; Optical fibres.
Electron tubes
Thermal noise, shot noise , flicker noise, recombination noise, noise figure, noise temperature.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
1. To examine the high frequency performance of a common emitter amplifier by computer simulation using
PSPICE.
2. To obtain the transfer characteristics and the transient response of a CMOS inverter with inverter load by
computer simulation.
3. To obtain the transfer characteristics and the transient response of standard TTL NAND gate with a load by
computer simulation.
4. To observe the transient response of a CMOS NAND with a inverter load and a track capacitance y
computer simulation.
Recommended Text:
Supplementary reading:
1. Adir Bar-Lev, “ Semiconductors and Electronics Devices”, Prentice – Hall International, Inc., 1984
2. Morgan D V and Board K, “Semiconductor Micro technology”, John Wiley & Sons,1983
The course provides an introduction to the physical principles underlying the operation of present-day electron
devices and components.
The approach is to initially formulate a simple theory for the operation of the device, then an equivalent circuit that
depends on the external factors, as voltage, current, temperature and the material properties. The device
advantages and limitations are deduced and finally the common applications discussed.
Lectures = 80 Hours
95
Decision Criteria; Basic relationships of probability; conditional probability; decision trees; bayes’ theorem; utility as a
decision criteria; Replacement Analysis (It is expected that basic knowledge on probability is given in Mathematics
subject)
Formulation of a mathematical model for the central problem; graphical method; simplex algorithm for solving the
problem; sensitivity analysis, B-ranging, C- ranging; Interpretation of Primal and Dual in linear programming
problems; some technical issues in linear programming such as Infeasibility, Unbounded ness, Redundancy,
Alternative optimum, and Degeneracy; Linear programming real-world applications; computer application.
Transportation method as a special case of linear programming problems; Matrix formation for the central problem;
Northwest corner rule; Lowest cost cell rule; Modi method; degeneracy; real-world application; computer
applications; assignment problem.
Formulation of the central problem; economic order quantity (EOQ); Graphical presentation and formulae for EOQ;
Finite production rate; re-ordering; quantity discounts; stock outs (back-orders) ; probabilistic stock system;
variability of demand and lead time; cyclical review; re-order level; re-order point systems.
Queuing Theory
Simple queuing systems, queuing objectives and cost behavior, layout of queuing systems; Poisson distributed
arrivals; exponentially distributed service times; queuing systems for finite queues; limitations of queuing theory;
simulation of queues.
Simulation 08 Hours
Need for simulation; simulation in practice; types of simulation; probabilistic simulation; Monte Carlo method time
dependent systems; event dependent systems; applications in Inventory Control and Queuing systems; computer
applications.
Basic network terminology and definitions of events, activities, and duration; rules for constructing networks; identity
dummy and logic dummy activities; time analysis; earliest event time and latest event time of an event; earliest start
time, latest start time, earliest finish time and latest finish time of an activity; total float, free float and independent
float; critical path method (CPM) and programme evaluation review technique (PERT) ; cost scheduling; network
compression and minimum cost and /or time paths; resource scheduling, resource leveling and smoothing;
computers in project planning; precedence networks.
The students will be asked to solve a real-world linear programming problem (preferably using a
computer application ) and interpret the solutions.
The students will be asked to solve a real-world inventory control problem using the simulation
technique and interpret the solution.
The students will be asked to identify the activities and construct a network for a real world
project; identify the critical path, allocate resources, undertake leveling and smoothing; and prepare progress charts.
96
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Quantitative Approaches to Management-Seventh edition; by Richard I Levin, David S Rubin, Joel P Stinson,
and Everette E Gardner. McGraw – Hill, New York.*
2. Statistics for Business and Economics-fourth edition; by David R Anderson, Dennis J Sweeney, and Thomas
A Williams. West Publishing Company, New York.*
3. Operational Research; by S S Cohen. Edward Arnold, London.*
4. Quantitative Techniques; An Instructional Manual by T Lucey. D P Publications, London ELBS publication:
ISBN 1 905435893 *
5. Operations Research; by B S Goel and S K Mittal. Rragati Prakashan, Meerut, India.
6. Probability and Statistics for Engineering and Sciences – Third Edition; by Jay L Devore. Brroks /cole
Publishing Company, California.
7. Systems Analysis; by John Bingham and Grath Davies. Macmillan, London.
* Highly recommended
lectures 80 Hours
Eligibility test
An eligibility test should be administered to all students who are planning to offer this optional subject for Part III.
The test should cover topics the students should have learnt in Part I and II. These topics are essential to follow the
lecture series on control systems engineering. Since only 132 hours have been allocated for this subject these topics
will not be again taught in depth.
Differential Equations
97
Classification of differential equations, solution of linear differential equations with constant coefficients, particular
integral, complementary solution, homogeneous differential equations,
Definition, properties of LT, LT of simple functions, Inverse laplace transform, partial fractions.
Fourier algebra
Manipulation of complex numbers, mapping, partial fractions involving complex numbers, representation of a
periodic function by a complex number determination of magnitude and phase of a ratio of two complex
polynomials.
Nonlinear systems
Solution of second order differential equations using phase plane method, nonlinearities due to hysteresis, backlash,
saturation
Property Measurement.
Use of strain gauges ( for mechanical stream) use of thermocouples, thermistors (for electrical and electronic
streams)
Only those who obtain an A (over 70% ) for the prerequisite test should be allowed to register for the subject.
A 1 Introduction 02 Hours
Simple properties of open and closed – loop systems. Terminology, Qualitative description of simple control systems.
Concepts of accuracy, precision, stability, and sensitivity.
Dynamics of simple linear devices and systems, covering differential equations for basic electrical, mechanical,
thermal , fluidic elements such as inductor, capacitor, mass, viscous friction, thermal storage element, fluid storage;
Representation of dynamic systems using higher-order differential equations; Definition of laplace transform,
properties useful for control engineers, unit impulse, unit step and unit ramp functions, free and forced response,
transfer function, transient and steady state responses, position error constant, velocity error constant, transfer
function of simple engineering systems such a R _C circuits, unity and nonunity feedback systems, overall transfer
function, block diagram representation of systems, rules for manipulating block diagrams. Characteristic equation,
pole-zero representation, closed-loop time domain specifications, Routh-Herwitz criterion.
Basis for frequency domain analysis, steady state response of linear systems to sinusoidal inputs and general
periodic inputs. Output response of nonunity feedback systems to sinusoidal inputs, Nyquist stability criterion, gain
and phase margin, bode diagrams, Nichol’s chart, series compensation using phase –lead compensators.
Representation of higher order constant coefficient differential equations for SISO systems using a set of first order
differential equations, has variable canonical form, characteristic equation and eigenvalues, transfer function, pole –
zero cancellation.
98
General vector-matrix differential equations for systems, classification of systems by (i) system order (ii) number of
inputs (iii) number of outputs (iv) time dependence or independence (V) analog or discrete (vi) linear or nonlinear
(vii) homogeneous or non
Homogeneous, equilibrium points, linearization of systems about a given operating point.
Comparison of linear and nonlinear control systems, mathematical models for (i) ideal relay, (ii) deadband, (iii)
backlash, (iv) nonlinear springs, (v) hysteresis and (vi) friction, linearization around operating point, phase-plane
method, describing function, limit cycle oscillations, liapunov method, use of explicit Euler and classical fourth-order
Runge-Kutta method to solve nonlinear systems.
C 2. Discrete Systems
Difference equations, z-transforms, system transfer function of SISO systems, stability with reference to the location
of poles in the Z plane (state –space model for discrete systems, discretization of continuous systems not included),
samplers in analog control systems, pulse transfer function, zero-order hold, analysis of analog feedback systems
with one sampler ( discrete , controllers no included),
Transducer performance and specifications, transducers for the measurement o linear and angular displacement,
force, velocity and acceleration, pressure difference, temperature detector (RTD), thermal and transport lag, use of
strain gauges.
Various types of actuators, representation of actuator dynamics using transfer function, conversion of actuator
driving signals from electrical to pneumatic actuators with digital inputs and digital outputs.
Introduction, specifications of PLC’s programming hardware (Hand-held) terminal and computer) , software for
programming – matrix programming, statement list (STL) and ladder diagram (LDR) programming, entities inside
PLC such as inputs, outputs, pulse timers, on-timers, delay-off timers, counters, flags, practical training on LDR
programming of a process involving a maximum of three inputs, three outputs, one timer, one flag and not more
than five rungs.
(B1 8) + (B 2 16)
Section C - NL systems discrete systems - 24 hours
(C1 6) + (C2 6) (C3 6) + (C4 6)
Total = 80 Hours
Note * The times given are for a general guidance only and are approximate
Practical List
99
3. Programming of PLC. Students will be required to write the LDR Program for a typical industrial
process needing PLC control. The programme will be downloaded from computer to the PLC. The Program in the
PLC should be then simulated by artificially activating inputs. (3 hours)
Note: The Control engineering laboratory can accommodate 12 students for on 3- hours session.
ASSESSMENT PATTERN
I Qualifying Test
A Qualifying MCQ type exam should be given by the lecturer I charge at the end of the lecture series. This test could
of 2 hours duration consisting of 100 short questions on fundamentals of control systems engineering.
Those who pass this test will be eligible for the 3-hour final examination.
The question paper will contain 3 sections with 3 questions each. The question paper may be prepared in the form
of “book” with enough blank space between questions. Candidates can write the answers in the space provided.
(This will make marking examiners work easier).
Candidates should answer 5 questions selecting not more than two from each section. Programmable calculators
(not the ones which can sore formulae in symbol form) will be allowed so that students can do repetitive calculations
quicker.
References
Students are strongly urged to have a personal copy of book Number I given below.
100
324 MACHINE DESIGN
Lectures = 60 Hours
Design objectives
Stages in Machine Design
Role of the computers in Machine Design and introduction computer Aided Design
3. Revision of failure theories, fatigue, reliability, surface damage etc. and their I importance in machine
design 05 Hours
Selection of bearings
Mounting of bearings
101
Clutches
Brakes
Others
Fluid couplings
Torque converters
8. Design features of spur gears, helical gears, bevel gears and worm gear wheel. (strength , surface wear
and dynamic load considerations), other factors attribute to failure of gears
06 Hours
Note
• Whatever possible it is necessary to use International Standards, Manufacturers, Catalogues, Design Hand
Books, etc, so that the student would appreciate the use of such materials in their work.
• Quote relevant practical examples wherever necessary so that the student may understand the principles
and concepts by relating them to real world applications.
• It is expected to revise under I and 3 above certain, topics which the student had previously covered in
other subjects learned in Part I
• It is important the student be given sufficient opportunities to develop analytical skills through eight
assignments (CLASS ROOM DESIGN EXERCISES) each of four hours duration. Such EXERCISES are listed
separately. Some assignments are to be arranged as home based and some others both home and class room
based. The number of hours to be spent at home in such home based and some others both home and class room
based. The number of hours to be spent at home in such home based exercises are not considered as a part of the
32 hours to be spent in the classroom. Also it is expected that the student will apply his knowledge in several topics
learned previously through these exercises so that the lecturer is not required to devote much of the time in revising
such topics but devote time economically in the new topics.
RECOMMENDED BOOKS
1. Machine Design Theory and Practice by Aaron D Deutschman, Walter J Michels and Charles E
Wilson
2. Fundamentals of Machine Component Design by Robert R Juvinell
3. Computer Aided Machines Design by Andrew D Dimarogonas
4. Machine Designs by P C Sharma and D K Aggarwal
5. Standard Handbook of Machine Design by Joseph E Shigley, Charles R Mischke
6. Machine Design by M Movnin and D Goltziker
1,2,3, and 5 are considered to be as highly recommended texts. In addition the students are advised to refer to
relevant Hand Book in Mechanical Engineering Design /Machine Design.
102
LIST OF ASSIGNMENTS
Hours to be Spent
Classroom Home
9. Integrated design: 02 08
A suitable design exercise
Incorporating several mechanical
Elements studied previously in the
Subject . This should cover features
Such a strength, production,
Maintenance, cost , etc.
• Compulsory assignment
103
Lectures = 80 hours
Course Objective :
The subject deals with the design; installation, operation and improvement if integrated systems of people and
machines for the purpose of manufacturing conversion of essential input resources to marketable products. The
discussion of application of computer microprocessor and information technology where appropriate is implicit in the
syllabus.
Classification of Manufacturing systems based on Market goals, objectives, measurement of system performance,
static and dynamic characteristics of systems; stability and rate of response, simulation modeling.
Long range planning decisions; product design, selection of equipment and processes, Job design, location of system
facility layout, materials handling systems, safety and environmental considerations.
04 hours
Organization for manufacture: Organizational structures, line and staff, matrix, management functions,
communication, co-ordination, decision making. 06 hours
Forecasting: qualitative methods, technological forecasting, time-series methods move in averages, exponential
smoothing. 10 hours
Investment Analysis: Project appraisal, capital budgeting, and cash flow analysis, plant replacement analysis.
08 hours
Planning of Projects: Network analysis estimating activity times, resource allocation and smoothing, performance
analysis, budgetary control. 08 hours
Human environment: Industrial Ergonomics, work study , incentive schemes, theories of motivation, human
behavior.
Quantity control : ordering systems, inventory optimization, line-of balance charts , job sequencing, work loading
introduction to material requirements planning.
Quality control: planning, product quality, sampling, total quality control , plant maintenance and reliability.
Cost Control: Elements of product cost, absorption and marginal costing , job costing, process costing.
Ref.
104
326 SOFTWARE SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Course Contents
1. Introduction
Historical developments, the software crisis. Managing large software projects, the role of the software engineer.
The software life cycle. The relationship to other engineering disciplines.
4. Software specification
Operational and descriptive specifications. Verification of specifications. Specification qualities.
Group Assignment
References
105
327 Engineering Management
Lectures = 80 hrs
Business Units
Types of business organisations, Capital , structure, major sources of finance for business, working capital.
Theory of double entry, cash book, the petty cash book, the journal, the ledger the trial balance, profit and loss
account and the balance sheet.
Management Accounting
Cost for decision making, marginal costing, profitability, long-range planning, capital investment appraisals.
ORGANISATIONS 12 hrs
The nature of individual and groups to work attitudes, job satisfaction and motivation. Leadership and being a
manager. Training and development of human resources.
Natural resources population growth, structure of the economy and balance in the economy factors inhibiting
growth, balance of payments.
The role of the government and its instinstitutions with regard to industrial development.
MARKETING
The marketing function, marketing system and marketing concept. Importance of marketing in the economy,
customer relations.
Techniques required for managerial decisions. Statistical inference, correlation and regression, time series analysis,
linear programming and network analysis.
106
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Public administration in Sri Lanka, politics, public administration, and development. Provincial administration. Public
policy analysis, development planning, & economic policy. Public enterprises management.
References:
107